Robert Duvall: Don't Mourn the Good Old Days of Hollywood

Robert Duvall: Don't Mourn the Good Old Days of Hollywood

Published: January 07, 2011 @ 1:40 pm
Print this page
By Brent Lang

They may not make them like they used to, but Robert Duvall is still optimistic about the future of movies.

“There’s still room for all kinds of films. Going into the 21st century, this is such an in-medium that you’re getting all kinds of people to do it -- African Americans, Spanish -- it’s open to all,” Duvall told a capacity crowd at a showing Thursday night of his acclaimed new drama “Get Low,” part of TheWrap's ongoing Academy Screening Series.

Unlike other actors of his generation who mourn the passage of the decade when “Easy Riders” and “Raging Bulls” took over the studios, Duvall said he believes that film’s future is bright.

“What’s been pushed to the outside can still be seen by the public, and the public can benefit,” Duvall said.

In fact, the Oscar winner mentioned one movie that is even better today than four decades ago, when he first rose up the acting ranks with memorable roles in screen classics such as “The Godfather,” “Apocalypse Now,” and “The Great Santini”: the Coen Brothers' remake of “True Grit.” The actor played Ned Pepper in the 1969 original, squaring off against John Wayne.

(Duvall pictured right with "Get Low" director Aaron Schneider, TheWrap's Dominic Patten and producer Dean Zanuck; all photographs by Jonathan Alcorn.)

“The old guys were more authoritarian,” Duvall said. “It’s been a while since I’ve seen the first one, but I think maybe this ‘True Grit’ is a little better.”

Though Duvall is optimistic about the current state of cinema, he said getting a movie like “Get Low,” a low-budget, Southern flavored drama that tackles issues of guilt and redemption, was no easy task.

“It’s sometimes easier to raise $100 million than it is to raise $10 million,” Duvall said. “[“Get Low”] definitely would have fit in during the moviemaking era of the '70s, which was a rich time. It’s definitely outside the Establishment now.”

When it came to “Get Low” -- which tells the story of a hermit living in the Depression-era south who decides to throw himself a funeral party -- Duvall was so impressed with the concept that he stayed with the project for years while it struggled to find financing.

For the actor, the film provided a nice bookend to the parts he played in movies such as “Tender Mercies” and “To Kill a Mockingbird” that center on the lives of common people in rural settings.

“It was a combination of Faulkner and Horton Foote,” Duvall said. “When they came to my farm and told me about it, I said, ‘Anyone who sets up and goes to his own funeral, that’s a pretty good part to play.'”

Duvall’s familiarity with the Southern setting was essential, because despite the over five years it took to raise the financing, the production was shot in a whirlwind 24 days.

Tags: Dustin Hoffman, film, Gene Hackman, Get Low, Horton Foote, Movies, Robert Duvall, True Grit
Sign Up For First Take

Get Our Daily Email, and Receive Invitations to Our Screenings Series

Start your day with all of the news worth knowing

What's First Take?

Description

TheWrap's 2nd annual Screening Series features 12 of the most significant films of 2010, and will screen at the Arclight Sherman Oaks through December 2010, followed by question-and-answer sessions with the film's talent. The films are open to members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the DGA, PGA and WGA members, and to subscribers to TheWrap's daily email newsletter, First Take.

Subscribe to Awards Screening Series 2010/2011
Most Popular
Columns
Wrap Tweets