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James Franco

'Pineapple' star Franco digs deep, plays stoner and serious


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Accomplished actor: James Franco is working toward a master's degree in writing and is interested in art.

In June, he graduated from UCLA with an English degree. On Wednesday, he's starring in comedy king Judd Apatow's latest romp, the stoner "bromance" action comedy Pineapple Express, with Franco's dense pot dealer Saul going on the lam with his equally obtuse customer Dale (Seth Rogen). And in November, he romances Sean Penn in Gus Van Sant's Milk, a biopic of San Francisco's first openly gay elected official.
"Who would have thought I'd play a Spicoli-like character and then make out with Spicoli in the same year?" wonders Franco, 30, referring to Penn's infamous pothead surfer from 1982's Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
Milk producer Bruce Cohen, for starters: "It couldn't be a better showcase for his talent to look at these two roles. They're both different sides of him.
"He's had a lot of life experience," Cohen says. "He can bring the attributes of the young stoner guy he needs for Pineapple, but underneath that is the scholar and the deep thinker and the guy who wants to learn about art and is interested in politics. His performances are complex and layered."

And this year, they are getting major notice. Franco has been kicking around Hollywood since the late '90s, when Apatow's short-lived but critically adored TV dramedy Freaks and Geeks put him on the map and set many teen hearts aflutter. Since then, he won a Golden Globe for his 2001 portrayal of James Dean in TNT's TV biopic and alternately befriended and battled Tobey Maguire's Peter Parker in the behemoth Spider-Man trilogy.
His career has been a mixed bag of the artsy, the big-budget and the plain forgettable. So it's somehow fitting that Franco is back in the spotlight in tandem with Pineapple producer Apatow, who first spotted Franco's lighter side on Freaks, and Freaks co-star Rogen, who realized that the two had sizzling chemistry.
Apatow calls Franco "a very smart, sweet person. He seems to have really evolved over the last 10 years into this really easygoing, approachable, warm man. When we did Freaks and Geeks, he was so hungry and obsessed with the work. It made him a little more of an intense guy. Now, he's very happy in his life."

Switching roles
Apatow and Franco stayed in touch after Freaks was canceled. By happenstance they ran into each other at the Austin airport in 2005, when Franco was promoting The Ape, a comedy he directed, at the city's film festival. Apatow suggested they work together again. Flush from the success of his 2005 comedy The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Apatow sent Franco a script that he and Rogen had been kicking around for years but hadn't been able to get produced. Suddenly, they could.
"We sent him Pineapple for the role of Dale. The idea came up to switch roles," says Rogen, who co-wrote the screenplay about two potheads on the run from a crooked cop and murderous dealers.
The casting flip-flop paid off. Franco, says Rogen, is "so lovable in the movie, and we didn't predict that the lovability of Franco would come through so much. (Saul) was written as the dumbest guy on earth. No one's sitting there thinking James Franco should play (him). Sometimes it takes working with your friends to bring that up and believe it would work."
Franco takes his work seriously, even more so when it comes to the funny stuff.
Even Franco's seemingly thrown-together ensemble — starting with the greasy, matted wig he's sporting — is no accident.
"We're on the run, we don't have the chance to change, I have one outfit, so we'd better get it right," says Franco. "They wanted me to wear these Guatemalan pants. I was like, 'Who wears these awful things?' And Judd and Shauna Robertson, the other producer, are good friends with Woody Harrelson and said, 'Woody wears these all the time.' I even met some other friends of Woody's and they're like, 'Yeah, Woody wears them.' That's how the outfit came about."
He watched all the major stoner movies, including his favorites that "had something more going on" than just endless weed jokes, such as The Big Lebowski, Fast Times and Brad Pitt's stoned turn in True Romance. But he says he didn't actually smoke any illegal substances to get into character.

Wicked wit
During interviews for Pineapple, he gets asked one question repeatedly: How did he and Rogen research their roles? So he has come up with an answer to throw interviewers for a loop. He tells them he experimented with black-tar heroin, but knew when to pull back.
That's his goofy, sharp sense of humor, also on display in his acting tutorials on FunnyOrDie.com.
"Basically, Pineapple is a documentary," he deadpans. "I was always going to play Saul. They found me in my apartment, there was no script, they just came into my place. My dealer came after me. It was perfect."
In reality, Franco says, "I used to smoke weed, but I haven't done it in a long time. Everybody, even now, thinks, 'That guy is stoned.' It's just the way I talk, because I don't smoke weed. Somehow, there's something about me, the way I talk, that implies that I'm on drugs."
Franco calls Pineapple the most fun movie he ever has worked on. He even had a Saul-like moment when he and a friend took his two plus-sized cats for a walk in Los Angeles.
"We got them leashes so we could take them outside, because they're completely indoor cats. They got so scared," says Franco. "We're walking down Sunset and one of them got out of the leash and jumped over the fence to the Chateau Marmont. We were hunting him down in the bushes of the Chateau Marmont."
The real Franco is nothing like Saul, who hides in trash bins, adores his Bubby (grandma) and slushies, and tries to smash a windshield with his foot.
"He's a very education-minded person," says Apatow. "We used to laugh because in between takes he'd be reading The Iliad on set. We still haven't read The Iliad. It was a very difficult book. With him, it was always James Joyce or something."
On the set of Freaks, recalls Franco, "this sounds so pretentious, but I was reading Proust. And Judd is like, 'Why do you read things like that?' I don't know. It's good? But Judd reads. He gave me a great book called A Fan's Notes by a guy named Frederick Exley."

Higher education
Franco is showcasing his cerebral side in November's Milk, Van Sant's pedigreed political biopic starring Penn as gay activist Harvey Milk, the "mayor of Castro Street," who was assassinated in 1978. Milk producer Dan Jinks says Franco was cast because "there's a sensitivity that exudes from him. He can, without trying, make you see into his soul. He makes it seem effortless."
Franco has known Penn for years and has gone to him for career advice. Back in April, after the film was shot, the two were hanging out at the Coachella music festival with Franco's actress girlfriend, Ahna O'Reilly (Forgetting Sarah Marshall). Penn would ask O'Reilly, " 'What do you think about me being the other girl?' " says Franco. "And he would always ask me if my girlfriend was the better kisser."
For Penn and Franco's first kiss, Van Sant was inspired by a video piece from artist Douglas Gordon featuring two people engaged in a three-minute lip-lock, resulting from a 12-hour make-out session.
Penn and Franco's first smooch lasted "a minute. It doesn't sound like a long time, but in front of 200 people, it's a long time," says Franco. "We're sitting on the curb, kissing. You can't deny what's going on. I'm kissing Spicoli and it's still going and it's not stopping and it was when he had a beard and the beard is scraping me. Afterwards, we were like, 'All right, how are those Raiders?' "
Next up for Franco? Tackling higher education once again, as he moves to Manhattan to pursue a master's degree in writing at NYU and Columbia; his two felines will stay back in Los Angeles with his brother.

Road trip
Before classes start, he would like to go on a road trip to check out what he calls "Earth art pieces" scattered around the western USA.
"I've always wanted to see Smithson's Spiral Jetty in Utah, The Lightning Field of New Mexico. And there's Donald Judd's center in Marfa, Texas," he says.
He hopes to write and direct full time.
As for his decision to go to school just when his career is on fire, courtesy of Pineapple and Milk? Franco responds with a Zen-like attitude Saul would value.
"Some people would say (that was) really stupid. It's not like I'm gonna stop acting. It's just that before I did these two movies, I was really tired of acting," he says.
"I was putting a ton of work in and not getting as much satisfaction out of it. So I just needed something else to focus my attention on, to take the pressure off. Turns out that I love school."

USAToday



I love this interview!!! lol! xxXxx
 
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Lots going on in James' blunt

FIVE QUESTIONS | Franco channels Spicoli for his 'Pineapple' stoner


August 3, 2008
Recommend (1)

'I took a shot in the head, but I have a hard head," says James Franco, who co-stars in "Pineapple Express" as Seth Rogen's best friend and pot dealer. "We also have a shot in this film where I'm in the woods and I run into a tree. That's my head hitting that tree.
"I even went to the hospital and got stitches," says the actor, who plays Harry Osborn in the "Spider-Man" franchise. "I did finish the scene with blood pouring down my face. I kept saying, 'Am I OK?' Everyone said, 'No, you really messed yourself up.' But I think I messed myself up in a good way."

1 We think of you as a serious actor. Why do a pot comedy?
I haven't done a comedy in awhile. I did direct a low-budget movie called "The Ape," and Judd Apatow saw it. Judd called me up and said, "I miss the funny Franco." I hadn't done a comedy since [the TV series] "Freaks and Geeks." Judd said, "You and Seth also should do a movie together." I read "Pineapple Express" and thought, 'Oh, Seth, you get to play the good role of the dealer, and I want that one. He said, "No, you can play it." I couldn't believe it.

2 Talk to us about the funky outfit you wear in the film.
I wasn't a fan of the baggy pants or the T-shirt with a kitten sitting in a shark's mouth. But my character is happy about it. I think that shark on my shirt is rescuing the kitten. Once I had the outfit solved, then my character Saul came out.

3 Did you watch some "Fast Times" to get in the mood? Are you channeling Spicoli?
Yeah, I watched a lot of pot movies. My favorites were always characters who weren't in so-called stoner movies. I loved Spicoli, who Sean Penn played brilliantly in "Fast Times," or Jeff Bridges' the Dude in "The Big Lebowski." I love Brad Pitt in "True Romance." They are goofy stoner guys, but there is something more going on with them.

4 You work with Penn in the new Harvey Milk movie. Who do you play?
It's an amazing project directed by Gus Van Sant. I've been a huge fan of Gus since the early days of "Drugstore Cowboy" and "My Own Private Idaho." My scenes are mostly with Sean, which was my dream as an actor. I play Scott, someone who is close to Milk.

5 You're going back to school to get your college masters at NYU. Why is education so important to you?
I have a liberal arts degree, and I really think I could teach and enjoy it. I also think that would be a great thing for me to do in the future or at least do it on the side. I want to continue school and get my grad degree in writing and directing. Why not challenge yourself to learn more and build on the foundation you have in life?

SUNTIMES
 
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James Franco - “GQ” September 2008

Tue, 12 August 2008 at 12:27 pm
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James Franco takes the September 2008 cover of GQ Magazine as his latest comedy, Pineapple Express, is out in theaters now. Here’s what the 30-year-old actor had to say:
On making a few bad films: “I wanted to be the best actor that I could be. It’s just sad for me, because I know I worked so hard, and I just feel like in some way I kind of blew it. It’s just hard to get away from what I see as the stain of these bad movies.”
On not getting along with the cast of Freaks & Geeks: “I’ll admit I was not a team player. A lot of it, I think, just had to do with being obnoxious when the camera was on someone else. Maybe I’d eat a banana in the background that would take focus away from other actors. I didn’t think about it that way, but now I could say, ‘Look, the scene’s not about me, it’s about them, just chill out, James. Don’t eat a f—-ing banana.’ ”
On kissing costar Sean Penn in the movie Milk: “The first kiss of the movie was out on Haight Street, with, like, 200 people watching, outside. I’m sure in the end it will be a really cool shot, but it starts close and then it takes maybe a minute. That’s a long time on film with everybody watching, and, like, a fake moustache getting in your mouth. It was long enough that you couldn’t help but thinking, ‘Oh, my God, I’m kissing Spicoli.’”
To read the full article, visit GQ.com.
 
^ Yup! Sure is! Did you read the interview? It was so good.

I've always thought he was a very interesting if not complex and intense guy, and I think that definitely came across in the GQ interview. It was good though. Plus, all the stories about his time shooting Sonny were hilarious ( if not disturbing\hilarious!)
 
The full GQ interview is very revealing, like one of the most revealing interviews I've read in a long time...I actually really felt for him through most of it. He seems kind of tortured with his choices in his career and life in general...maybe a little too open but it made him endearing. I really didn't know much about him at all and it was a great introduction. I do agree his career choices have been bad for the most part...but he beats himself up too much.
 
^ I agree. I mean, what actor hasn't done bad movies? It's better to do them at the beginning of your career than the end, that's what I say!

Glad to see you're a fan of him, LUXXX! He seems to be getting so many new fans which is fantastic.

The interview was revealing, you're right. It was interesting to read though because over the last five or so years that I've been aware of James, I've been constantly confused by his personality. Sometimes he is really represented like a jerk through the media and then other times he's represented like the sweetest guy that lived. The honesty of the GQ interview explains why! lol! He can be both the jerk and the sweetheart. But then, come on, who can't?

It's good to see him reflecting back on his past though. Hopefully this is a positive point in James' life and it's only gonna get better for him now. I hope so!
 
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My favorite part was at the end with the emails...

In the e-mail, Franco also expresses regret over the things we didn’t have a chance to discuss: “I felt like we didn’t talk about writing or art as much as I would have liked, as those are what take up most of my life now. But if we didn’t it’s because I closed those subjects because I was uncomfortable about this forum as a place to discuss those things. Who wants to hear an actor talk about books or art? No one. I just hope my interest in those areas, and my dedication to them, was apparent. But I know as an actor I’m not supposed to show interest in anything except charities and the environment. I don’t know. I don’t know what I’m supposed to show interest in. (By the way, we didn’t talk about the work I do with orphans, but that’s OK. Maybe the next article.)” He closes with the words “I am just rambling. Thanks.”


Five minutes and thirty-seven seconds later, a second e-mail arrives. It reads, in its entirety, “I know I take all this crap too seriously. I should learn from Seth just to take it easy.”
This whole exchange made me like him, yeah he takes it too serious but it's nice to seem someone does. Of course it's all entertainment but it's still people involved and you forget how much we all judge movie stars, especially the ones who don't shut up and just entertain. I loved him in Pineapple Express and it's great that he wants to continue learning with college.
 
^ Well said. BTW, maybe I'm being dense, but was the " By the way, we didn't talk about the work I do with orphans..." bit a serious point or was it his weird sense of humor? I only ask because obviously beforehand he's talking about how actors are only supposed to care about, " charities and the environment."
If he really does do work with orphans, how fantastic! If it's his sarcastic humor, well, it never fails! lol!

I'm really liking all of these new interview with James though. They have so much insight and depth. If you compare them to any interview he did back in like 2003-2005, you can tell now he wasn't so happy then. He seems to be more comfortable with himself now, which is great.
 
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^ Lol! Aaaw, you guys are cute! I don't have that dream though. I'd act like a moron + would hate to invade his privacy.
 
It just makes me laugh that the girl specifically described that he was hiding from the general public behind headphones and a computer. And the next sentence is AND THEN I APPROACHED HIM! Like, that's kind of dumb... :lol:! In all his interviews he talks about how serious he is about studying and getting his Master's, I don't blame him for being so annoyed. Good reminder not talk to provoke James while he's busy doing something. ^_^
 
Yeah!

I am really impressed with how serious he is about his studies. It shows a lot for his character, and I am glad that he is trying to accomplish something outside of the movie industry.
 
^ I can't watch the website. What's the story? I'm guessing James gets pissed off! lol! Did she bug him while he was studying because if so that's pretty understandable.
 

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