George Clooney's Open House
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Log in

I forgot my password

Latest topics
» George in Tuscany
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptySat 18 May 2024, 19:45 by benex

» The Good News
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyWed 15 May 2024, 18:19 by annemariew

» George Clooney to make his Broadway debut in a play version of movie ‘Good Night, and Good Luck
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyMon 13 May 2024, 19:19 by benex

» George celebrating his birthday on location in Italy
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyMon 13 May 2024, 02:07 by annemariew

»  George filming new film in UK
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptySat 11 May 2024, 01:04 by annemariew

» George Clooney e Amal Alamuddin in Francia, ecco il loro nido
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyWed 17 Apr 2024, 03:41 by annemariew

» George and Amal speaking at the Skoll Foundation conference in Oxford today
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyWed 17 Apr 2024, 03:37 by annemariew

» George in IF
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyFri 12 Apr 2024, 18:44 by party animal - not!

» Amal announces new law degree sponsorship
The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell EmptyFri 05 Apr 2024, 01:51 by annemariew

Our latest tweets
Free Webmaster ToolsSubmit Express

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

+2
lucy
lovelylois
6 posters

Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by lovelylois Wed 07 Mar 2012, 03:02

ice Cube, '21 Jump Street' Star, On N.W.A. And The Fight Between George Clooney and David O. Russell

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/06/ice-cube-21-jump-street_n_1324306.html?ref=entertainment

The Huffington Post Mike Ryan
First Posted: 03/ 6/2012 1:34 pm Updated: 03/ 6/2012 4:07 pm
When I was a freshman in high school, I begged my parents to buy me N.W.A's "Straight Outta Compton." At the time, the only other rap album I owned was "He's the DJ, I'm the Rapper" by D.J. Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince. The continuous loop of "Parents Just Don't Understand" that played in my bedroom was then replaced by "F-ck tha Police" (played very softly so my parents couldn't hear it, I should add). When Ice Cube was recording those lyrics, as we discuss, he was fairly certain that Midwestern suburban white kids would never get a chance to hear them.

Ice Cube co-stars in the Jonah Hill-Channing Tatum comedy, "21 Jump Street," as Captain Dickson -- a character that owns every stereotype of a fictional police captain, but also realizes that he owns those stereotypes. I chatted with a surprisingly poignant Ice Cube (surprising, in the fact that I wasn't expecting this open and honest of a conversation at a film junket) about his career -- everything from his early days with N.W.A. to Internet rumors about his "Good Day" (which you can read here) to breaking down the now-legendary fight between George Clooney and David O. Russell on the set of "Three Kings."

I like that your character owns every stereotype of a movie police captain.
That's the fun of this whole movie. I mean, even in the part where they tell Channing, "Dude, you look old," all of these are the things that the audience is probably thinking. And by breaking that fourth wall and telling the audience, "Yo, you're in on it with us," I think that's the appeal and the connections.

Before filming, did you re-watch anything like "Beverly Hills Cop"?
I mean, I already knew it. I've seen "Beverly Hills Cop" so many times. And "Starsky & Hutch" [the television series] and all of this stuff. So, I knew this dude. I just knew that he is mad about something. This cat is probably mad that he feels a little demoted: that he has to have his headquarters in a fucking Korean church. You know what I'm saying? And he's dealing with these baby-faced cops. And now he has to deal with these two: Channing and Jonah. He's just mad at the world.

Did you ever watch the TV series?
I used to catch it every now and then because it was a hot show at the time.

It was. And you really didn't know if the future superstar was going to be Johnny Depp or Richard Greico.
Yeah, you really couldn't figure that out. And, you know, Holly Robinson wasn't bad, too. So, I saw it a couple of times and I thought it was a cool premise.

This is a nerdy question, but do the events of this movie take place in the same universe as the original show?
No. [Laughs] No. It's a whole new breed of kids that's going to watch this thing who have never seen "21 Jump Street" and will never have to. This is its own movie, with a borrowed title and a borrowed premise. And that's what you want, because you don't want to hang your hat on 40-year-olds and 30-year-olds to feel nostalgic and go see this movie.

When you wrote "Friday," were you confident that it was going to be as successful as it turned out to be? Switching from music to film?
I was confident that... I was like, "Cool people are going to get this movie," and everybody else was going to be like, "Why did they make that movie?"

Did you ever feel like you were over your head?
Nah. Because I had worked my way to that point through videos, through directing, through writing treatments, through my acting in "Boyz N the Hood." So cameras were all around; I was not intimidated by the thought of jumping into a movie. What I really was thinking was that we're doing something that only a few people are really going to "get." That's kind of where I was. But I know those few people were going to love the shit out of it. I didn't anticipate everybody else kind of loving it -- people that were unfamiliar with that world. And, you know, "Boyz N the Hood" and "Menace II Society" and this other movie called "South Central" kind of showed our neighborhoods kind of in a nightmare scenario. Like, "Oh, shit." But we didn't feel that way growing up. You know, it was just "the neighborhood." So you found a way to laugh at things that most people would cringe at or find unable to live with. That's all that "Friday" is doing: laughing at the crazy shit that goes on in the neighborhood.

On the set of "Three Kings," did you get along with David O. Russell?
Yeah.

Well, after hearing that George Clooney got into a fight with him on set -- or that Mark Wahlberg appears to not want to work with him anymore...
Is that right? Wahlberg and Russell?

Yeah, he's hinted that he doesn't really want to work with him again.
David O. is a demanding director. And he sees it in his head, man. And he want's that exact performance. He's not going to move the camera until he gets it. So, that, to me, the work is to figure out what he wants and give it to him exactly. And to be ready for him to make changes on the fly. While you're acting, he'll yell, "No, no, no, no! Say it this way!"

That's a good impression of him, by the way.
[Laughs] It's nerve-wracking to some actors. And the shit with George was just, you know, I don't think David O. wanted George to be in the movie -- because he was trying to get other actors.

And George Clooney wasn't "George Clooney" yet.
No. And he was never satisfied that his star was George Clooney.

He was still best known as Dr. Ross on "ER" when that was filmed.
Yeah! So, that was the first problem. And it could never come out as he's seen it in his head -- so they would have to work on that all of the time. George Clooney had all of this technical dialogue and medical shit he was talking. Tactics and stuff. Then an extra fucked up this big helicopter scene -- an extra was in the wrong place. And David, all he did was [mimes grabbing a shirt], "Man, come on. Get over here!" That made George go crazy. He's like, "Dude, you can't run in there and fucking put your hand on these extras and push them around, yelling." And David was like, "Man, just worry about your fucking acting." And that's when they went at it. It was like two bulls forehead to forehead.

Did they actually fight?
They didn't actually fight, they just kind of got forehead to forehead and were about to fight. And you could tell that somebody was about to throw a punch, but they just broke it up. So it was kind of yelling and shit, and I'm sitting there, "Damn, is this really happening?"

I was a freshman in high school living in the suburbs of Kansas City when "Straight Outta Compton" was released. Were you surprised how well that album did with people like me? Suburban Midwestern white kids?
Yeah. You know, we thought [pauses]. We didn't think like that, like "suburban kids aren't going to listen to this."

But at the time, I know that was rare in my high school.
Yeah, but I think the Beastie Boys broke all the walls for me -- that white kids were already down without the music from that era. To me, it showed, "OK, this is more than a black thing." So by the time we came out, we thought we were not going to get exposure for other reasons. We thought that the record was just too dirty and raw to get any kind of light. That it would be in the back of the record section, back behind the Eddie Murphy comedy albums and shit. You know what I mean?

Yeah, hidden behind "Raw."
Yeah, in the "dirty" section. So that's where we thought our records were going to be. We had no idea that they were going to actually blow this shit up to the world. And that's kind of what happened. We thought that we were just an underground group.

Did it feel like things changed overnight?
It felt like a big buildup because I had been working and writing with Dre since, like, 1984. And he was in the Wrecking Crew, I was in my own group, we were all trying to make records like Run DMC and get on the radio. And that shit was just selling. I was like, "Man, we're never going to be them. They're already superstars in the game. Let's just do records that our homies like." And that's kind of what we reverted to. Once we decided, "Let's put our dreams on the shelf. Let's just do hip-hop and have fun with it for the people in the neighborhood." That's when it blew. And it was like, "Whoa."

I convinced my parents to buy "Straight Outta Compton" for me on the notion that it was the same thing as D.J. Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince's "He's the D.J., I'm the Rapper." So, personally, I had never heard anything like that before. Other than Beastie Boys. To a point...
Well, Beastie Boys, to me, was the introduction of rap is for everybody. You know, it's not just a black thing. And then from there, when we came out, it was already a foregone conclusion that all types of life listen to rap. All cultures. But we never knew that "Straight Outta Compton" would get promoted enough to blow like it did.

What happened with your version of "Welcome Back Kotter"?
It's not going to happen. I really wanted that movie to go, but it got into development hell with The Weinstein Company, and it just sunk it.

And no plans to do anything along those lines?
There are no plans right now. That would have been good because it would have been a lot different then the show. We were going to neighborhood schools and deal with some real Sweathogs. Some kid that people are scared...

So, not John Travolta.
Nah. These would be kids that people were going to be frightened to teach and frightened to be around. And I was going to be the only teacher that realized that these kids are normal and they're funny. So that, to me, was where we were leaning. That was kind of what the essence of the show was, but we were going to take liberties and make it into something in my neighborhood -- but they just kind of sat on it.

Mike Ryan is the senior writer for Moviefone. He has written for Wired Magazine, VanityFair.com, GQ.com, New York Magazine and Movieline. He likes Star Wars a lot. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter

ALSO ON HUFFPOST:

lovelylois
More than a little bit enthusiastic about Clooney

Posts : 1005
Join date : 2011-06-25

Back to top Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty Re: The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by lucy Wed 07 Mar 2012, 05:24

Director David sounds like an as-hole/jerk and those are my nice alphabets. Loved George in the 3 kings, maybe he wasn't a big time star yet, but he was well cast for his role and did a fine job.
lucy
lucy
Clooney Zen Master

Posts : 3209
Join date : 2010-12-10

Back to top Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty Re: The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by zizi Wed 07 Mar 2012, 05:36

Thank you Lovelylois !!.
Obviously their personalities clashed. David Russell with a very dictatorial way of directing and George with more relaxed way of dealing with people. Many times we heard how understanding and helpful George is to his co-stars on movie sets. No matter how known they were or young or inexperience. Throughout his carrier as an actor or director people always praise him for his professional advice, his patients and generosity in making the atmosphere on a movie set friendly and relaxing. And at the same time the acting is done to perfection.
It is easy to see why they could have a hard time getting along.

zizi
More than a little bit enthusiastic about Clooney

Posts : 1028
Join date : 2011-03-12

Back to top Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty Re: The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by Merlin Wed 07 Mar 2012, 07:26

It's a pity he's brought that up again though because George said just recently he and David met up and hugged and it was all over...I bet now it will all resurface again on the internet...
Merlin
Merlin
More than a little bit enthusiastic about Clooney

Posts : 1217
Join date : 2010-12-06
Location : Liverpool UK

Back to top Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty Re: The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by watching Wed 07 Mar 2012, 07:51

I think it is interesting to get his perceptive. Walberg was in George's circle for awhile and was always very positive about G (until he created Entourage and it was more widely received than Unscripted then the pair fell out). G was the big tv star who has talked about it in numerous interviews as how he was fighting for the extra with the undertone of what a great, decent guy he is. O'Russell has talked about it from his perspective as a director stressed and just trying to get the shot done. I think Ice Cube's take is interesting as he doesn't seem to be in the pocket of either party and isn't going to be swayed by Hollywood politics to support the story of one or the other. So his perspective, they had words and it was a non-event physically. Kinds throws a different light on the big noting story G has been telling for years. Good on him for standing up for the extra but the grandstanding is unnecessary.

In a 2000 interview, Clooney described his confrontation with Russell after tensions on the set had been steadily increasing. According to Clooney, Russell was demeaning the crew verbally and physically. Clooney felt this was out of line and told Russell, "David, it's a big day. But you can't shove, push or humiliate people who aren't allowed to defend themselves." Russell, said Clooney, replied, "Why don't you just worry about your fucked-up acting?! You're being a dick. You want to hit me? You want to hit me? Come on, pussy, hit me." Clooney said Russell then grabbed him by the throat and Clooney "went nuts", pummeling Russell. Clooney said Russell eventually apologized and filming continued, but Clooney described the incident as "truly, without exception, the worst experience of my life." When asked if he would work with Russell again, Clooney responded, "Life’s too short." Playboy article

watching
watching
Practically on first name terms with Mr Clooney

Posts : 2002
Join date : 2011-01-17
Location : A padded cell somewhere

Back to top Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty Re: The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by macs Wed 07 Mar 2012, 08:00

yeah O'Russel does not seem like the easiest guy to work with, apart from the 3 kings thing he does have a reputation. That being said, he makes good movies.
They seem to have settle their differences now, so he does not really matter anymore I guess
I knew this story, but I didn't realised that he didn't want Clooney for the lead... I wander who he had in mind, 'cos it turned out pretty good anyway, I think. And on the DVD commentaries I can't remember O'Russel having anything wrong to say about George, if I remember correctly he even says that ER came in useful when George actually have to attend Whalberg when he's hit...
macs
macs
Shooting hoops with George Clooney

Posts : 309
Join date : 2011-09-06

Back to top Go down

The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains  the tension between George and Director David Russell Empty Re: The Three KIngs/ Ice Cube explains the tension between George and Director David Russell

Post by Sponsored content


Sponsored content


Back to top Go down

Back to top


 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum