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Mr. Beaks Interviews Mr. Samuel L. Jackson Of LAKEVIEW TERRACE!

Published at:  Sep 19, 2008 4:24:21 AM CDT

SPOILER ALERT !!

Attention, America: Samuel L. Jackson is about to take over your multiplexes. After enjoying an uncharacteristically lengthy pause of about seven months (if you don't count his closing credits cameo in IRON MAN), Jackson is back with a vengeance this fall with LAKEVIEW TERRACE, SOUL MEN and THE SPIRIT. And, as is befitting the man's versatility, one's a drama, one's a comedy and one's a massively stylized comic book adaptation!

First up is Neil LaBute's LAKEVIEW TERRACE, a smarter-than-average formula thriller about a veteran police officer who bullies a young interracial couple that moves into his ideal neighborhood. Jackson plays Abel Turner, the aging cop who doesn't take kindly to the socially progressive behavior of the upwardly mobile thirtysomethings looking to flip the house next door. Abel is a man of God and a man of rules, and he doesn't need two troublemaking liberals filling his young kids' heads with modern notions of sexuality and racial harmony. Abel likes things the way they are: firmly under his control. And if he has to break a few laws to keep things that way, so be it; with the law on his side, he's nothing to worry about.

As I mentioned in the preface to my LaBute interview, LAKEVIEW TERRACE could've easily settled for the tried-and-true; however, thanks to the input of playwright Howard Korder and Jackson, the film is surprisingly thoughtful for a PG-13 release from Screen Gems. It also gives Jackson a fairly complex role to inhabit. Abel may be unnecessarily confrontational, but his protectiveness is entirely understandable; it's hard goddamn work raising children when the other parents just don't give a shit.

I've sat with Jackson a couple of times at roundtable interviews, but this is the first time I've gotten him all to myself. Though we go a bit heavy on the "hows" and "whys" of his character in the early going (to be fair, LT really is an effective conversation/argument starter), he really got warmed up when we started getting into the purpose of acting. Many people have criticized Jackson for working too much; to hear him tell it, he probably doesn't work enough. And you have to admire that: the guy just loves acting.

He also loves golfing, which is why I'm including this opening piece of small talk.




Mr. Beaks: Did you get a round in today?



Samuel L. Jackson: Yes. Six o'clock [in the morning].



Beaks: You try to play every day, right?



Jackson: Yeah. I got no job. I gotta play golf.



Beaks: (Laughing) Have you heard about that reality show Charles Barkley's planning, where he's going to have Hank Haney fix his golf swing?



Jackson: (Laughs) Okay.



Beaks: I saw him talking about it the other day. Someone asked him what happens if Haney fixes his swing in one show. He's said, "Trust me, it's going to take more than one show."



Jackson: Oh, yeah. I can tell.



Beaks: He jokes about it, but that swing is ugly. That's got to be a golfer's worst nightmare.



Jackson: (Laughing) I don't know. I've never had that issue. I've played with Charles, and he's got a pretty fluid swing when the ball's not in front of him; it's when he steps up to the ball that it gets all weird. I guess he's just got to clear his head.



Beaks: I guess. It's just so terrifying to behold. Moving on to happier things, we were talking earlier at the roundtable about how LAKEVIEW TERRACE starts with your character of Abel. He is, ostensibly, the protagonist. And we get Abel. He's heavy-handed with the kids, but there's nothing nefarious in correcting your son's english; he really seems to have their best interests at heart. When you first read the script, did you see him as a villain or just a guy who gives in to a great deal of stress?



Jackson: When I first read the script, it was a different incarnation. He was a bit crazier, and... he was a clear-cut villain. For me, I was thinking that was too easy; there should be some dynamic there that gives cause for him to feel a certain way. Or for him reacting to [Chris, Patrick Wilson's character] the way he does. It's interesting to figure out that relationship with [Abel]. Then we find out he's got a neighborhood watch thing, and he busts the kid when he's parked smoking; he realizes he's sneaking around and doing other stuff. And then finding the cigarette butts. Abel's finding reasons to mess with him. Still, they could've defused it just as easily as it got out of hand.



Beaks: Right. They don't handle Abel's antagonism very rationally.



Jackson: Exactly. There are ways they could've tried to defuse it, but they didn't. I mean, everything Chris says to Abel is confrontational. "I don't know what your problem with us is, but you need to get over it." And it's like, "Or what?" There are other ways you can say that.



Beaks: And the fact that Chris is so insistent on handling this. He wants to be a man. But he backs down every time. He's intimidated. He's trying to be something that he isn't. And Abel just devours him every time it becomes an issue.



Jackson: (Laughing) When we get to that place, yeah.



Beaks: But that's what I like about the movie. It's trying to get away from being a straightforward thriller in favor of being... more of a dissection of class and race--



Jackson: A study in society of sorts, and how we deal with stuff. We keep wanting to get around the issue, but it's there. Racism is there. And it's there on both sides in an interesting sort of way.



Beaks: And then there's the encroaching fires serving as a metaphor for the emotional conflagration.



Jackson: Bringing the stew to a boil.



Beaks: It's reminiscent of the way in which DO THE RIGHT THING used a heat wave to hasten conflict. LAKEVIEW TERRACE has to become a thriller eventually, but it at least tries to address these issues in a thoughtful fashion before giving the audience its rousing finale.



Jackson: It even reaches a point where Abel may be coming around. Things are about to mellow out until the [spoiler] happens. Had [spoiler] not happened, everything might've worked itself out. Might've.



Beaks: When you work with guys like LaBute and Korder, who have a playwriting background, do you feel like there's a little more meat on the bone in terms of character and theme?



Jackson: Well, it takes me back to when I was doing theater. Character development was important, my relationships with the characters inside the story were important... and how those things particularly played out from beginning to middle to end. There's something there that connects these people. Animosity becomes a part of it. Jealousy becomes a part of it. Like when he sees them screwing in the pool? He doesn't have that anymore. He doesn't have a woman. That's anger. And the fact that his kids saw it; they don't need to know that sort of thing yet. I mean, he's got a teenage daughter that's hormonal and bugging out, and she goes over to talk to the woman who was doing that? Who knows what she's saying to his daughter. I mean, he probably knows in the back of his mind that she's not saying, "Girl, you need to go out there and get you some!" But it's one of those things. He doesn't want her influenced by this woman. There's a lot of things going on there. And the fact that you've got people who are dialogue and character driven makes this all the richer; they can write things that resonate as true to the audience because they've set up the relationships in the proper way. My daughter being rebellious with me and not knowing how to deal with boys because of my strictness, or even the question of "There's a white kid who likes me. Is it cool for me to be okay with that?" She has her own dynamic going that Abel has no understanding of whatsoever.



Beaks: When you're lining up roles - and you're pretty prolific - do you think, "Okay, this one's a meaty role. I'll do something serious, and then I'll go have fun with THE SPIRIT?"



Jackson: No, those are accidents. I do movies as they show up or they're ready to go. I don't make a plan like, "Okay, I'm doing a heavy drama now. After this, I've got to do a comedy, then an action picture..." No. Whatever picture is ready to go after the one I just finished, I jump right in there. I'm actually getting ready to do a pretty intense movie at the moment.



Beaks: UNTHINKABLE?



Jackson: Yeah.



Beaks: That's a thriller.



Jackson: An intense thriller. I'm an interrogator who's trying to find out where a guy's planted three nuclear devices.



Beaks: You produce as well. You've done the two films with Kasi Lemmons [EVE'S BAYOU and THE CAVEMAN'S VALENTINE] and AFRO SAMURAI. Can you see getting to a place where you'll produce most of your movies?



Jackson: Not necessarily. I'm still like a gun-for-hire out here. Interestingly enough, in the off time I've had since SOUL MEN, I got this development deal with CBS. So I'm in the middle of creating and producing television shows right now. It's interesting. It's a lot quicker than the movies. In the movies, you can be in development hell for seven or eight years; with a TV show, you go in there and pitch it, and they either want it or they don't. I kind of like the swiftness of that. And that might satisfy the creative need that I have to produce or whatever. I like TV as much as I like film, so if I can produce television shows and create work opportunities for other people, that'd be great.



Beaks: I guess that feeds into your desire to move from genre to genre. You like to do a little comedy, you like to do a little action...



Jackson: And I like to move on.



Beaks: (Laughing) You're not precious about the work at all.



Jackson: Exactly.



Beaks: You're not going to be like Daniel Day Lewis, and have yourself thrown in a solitary cell for six weeks to understand imprisonment.



Jackson: No thanks. I think I can figure it out up here. (Taps his head)



Beaks: Earlier, we were talking about TROPIC THUNDER, and that idea about going to ridiculous extremes to get an Oscar nomination. Have you ever caught yourself getting like that?



Jackson: Other people think about that. I don't particularly care one way or another. "Oh, my god! This is my Academy Award!" No, it's not. It's just a job. Go and do it. You treat all jobs the same. They're all important. It's all about the story, the characters and interacting with these other people. And if something happens because of it? Great! But you can't go to work every day going, "Today is the day I win the Oscar. When the Academy sees this scene... Ooh!" I joke about stuff like that all the time. We'll be on set, and the director will be like, "I just need you to open this door." You do it, and they'll be like, "Yeah! Cut! Print that!" And you're like, "Whoa! I can't wait for the Academy to see that!" It's just a big joke. "Wait 'til the foreign press sees this! This is Globe material, Jackson!" Or occasionally you're like, "Man, we're gonna get slimed for this one. Kids' Choice is going to love this!"



Beaks: Kids love door opening scenes.



Jackson: Yeah. Here we go!



Beaks: But have you ever worked with actors who go nuts over awards?



Jackson: Of course! There are guys who only do award worthy movies. You know who they are. But the job has to be fun. If I didn't think the job was fun, I never would've done SNAKES ON A PLANE. I would've never done THE SPIRIT. There, you show up, and you're in a cartoon; it's the opportunity to have a lot of fun. Good. It should be fun. And there are a lot of actors I just can't conceive of in a comedy. It's kind of like, "Dude, lighten up. Every job doesn't have to be all of that."



Beaks: It's been interesting to see Pacino and De Niro back away from prestige films--



Jackson: Right, but a guy like Dustin Hoffman always did comedy. Laurence Olivier did comedy. Sidney Poitier did comedy. It works. It's acting. And some movies should just be entertaining. I mean, I get that there's this deep thing where everybody wants to leave their mark on the industry. Well, one of the ways to leave your mark on the industry is to entertain people. That's good. People love a lot of actors who don't have Oscars. And it's kind of cool to be in stuff that lasts in peoples' minds. Most people don't remember who won the Oscar from year to year. They couldn't care less. If it's a movie that they loved and entertained them, and they see you and go, "Dude, I loved that movie you were in! I love your work!"... that's important. That's what it's about. People can't go, "Oh, hey, weren't you in that movie where they... oh, yeah. You're the guy who does all those serious movies."



Beaks: So it's cool to have someone quoting not even the obvious stuff, but, say, GREAT WHITE HYPE?



Jackson: Yeah. Or "Where's my super suit!?!?" And, you know, as much as people talk about George not being able to write or whatever, I'm terrifically fucking pleased to be in STAR WARS. C'mon! STAR WARS is going to be studied forever by people going to film school. And I couldn't wait to say, "May the force be with you."



Beaks: Who wouldn't be? No matter what anyone thinks of the movies, every kid from my generation would've killed to say "May the force be with you" in a STAR WARS movie.



Jackson: That was beyond my wildest dreams, to be made a jedi. You can't beat that.



Beaks: And then to dictate how you'd die and what color your light saber would be?



Jackson: Well, once you get comfortable with George you can start asking for light saber colors and stuff like that.



Beaks: It's interesting that you have that comfort level with Lucas. He's become this controversial, distant figure.



Jackson: No, George is a funny guy. I enjoyed talking to him. George was like, "You know, I like you because you're like a ditch digger." I'm like, "What!?!?" And he'd say, "You get up every day, you know there's a ditch to be dug, and you go on and dig it. You're not one of those actors who's like 'I can only do one or two films a year because I don't want to burn myself out.'"

I'm an actor. My passion is acting. And if I only did one film a year, I wouldn't really be passionate about what I do. If you're not acting or actively trying to do what you do, then you're not truly passionate about what you do. I can't do one film every year. I have a need to create. I have a need. As much as I need to have dinner or breakfast, I need to act. If I had my way, I'd be doing TV, film, theater... all of it. Acting opportunities are rare in a lifetime. There are only so many, so you take 'em every chance you get.



You've done a lot of green screen acting by now. A lot of actors bitch about it. What are your feelings?



Jackson: It's that kid in a room, alone, doing whatever he wants to do. You can have as much fun as you want in this particular space. I'm an only child. I did it. I spent a lot of time in my room reading books and fighting stuff that wasn't there. Put me in a big green room, and I know just what to do!





And you'll be seeing him do it a lot this December in THE SPIRIT. But first you'll get LAKEVIEW TERRACE this Friday, September 19th. It's worth seeing.

Faithfully submitted,

Mr. Beaks



    + Expand All

    Readers Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:59:29 AM CDT

    Love Sam Jackson, but..

    by beetlegeuse

    this film looks like recycled shit.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:59:30 AM CDT

    testing 1 2 3

    by xega

  • Sep 17, 2008 2:08:40 AM CDT

    Awesome guy.

    by eggart

    Wish he'd make better movies. He's been mostly wasting himself on shit for about ten years.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 2:16:42 AM CDT

    Unlawful Entry...the Sammy J. version

    by literarywanderer

    Sorry Sammy, but no Kurt Russell and no Ray Liotta equals my butt missing this one.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 3:06:35 AM CDT

    any movie that Jackson has more than 5 lines in...

    by prossor

    ..is unwatchable.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 4:11:35 AM CDT

    Beaks

    by kwisatzhaderach

    How has Lucas become a distant figure? He's in the media every other week giving an interview. He was even at Best Buy the other day for The Force Unleashed release!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 4:12:17 AM CDT

    He seems like a great guy

    by xevoid

    But he appears to me to be like Tom Hanks in that he always plays himself. That's great, but I'd like to see him stretch, like play the captain of a pirate ship or a prisoner or something where he really has to be outside his element.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 4:15:50 AM CDT

    Prossor

    by kwisatzhaderach

    Pulp Fiction, Unbreakable, Jackie Brown, Die Hard With A Vengeance

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 6:35:54 AM CDT

    Tremendously talented, yet down to earth

    by mr nicholas

    I love Sam.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 7:27:36 AM CDT

    SLJ is Wooly Willy

    by grammaton cleric binks

    No, get your mind out of the gutter. You know the toy. It's the bald guy in a plastic case, and is filled with metal shavings. You use the magnetic wand to give him different hairstyles. With Sam the Man they try something different every movie. Other than a mohawk I don't know what's left.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 7:28:38 AM CDT

    And as I said in the other Beaks interview

    by grammaton cleric binks

    Having not seen either movie, this kind of reminds me of Pacific Heights except instead of a psycho tenant you have a psycho neighbor.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 8:50:12 AM CDT

    I LOVE COPS!

    by g-ride9000

    we had cop neighbors, and they almost arrested us for smoking weed on the porch of our home. I should write a script!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 9:13:27 AM CDT

    Good interview

    by gungan slayer

    You should have asked him about the rumors of George Lucas offering him to star and direct his "Red Tails." Can't wait for Lakeview Terrace

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 9:25:16 AM CDT

    Sam Jackson picks roles like we would, and thats cool.

    by cotton mcknight

    That's what I really like about him- he is a great talent and he is in a position to take any role he wants. And the roles he picks are inspired- on a fundamental level, I think they are all roles we wish we could play ourselves, but he has the talent to make them more than what they are on the written page. When I saw the trailer for Lakeview Terrace, I thought it was an interesting role for him, and I wondered what his motivation was. Of course I HATE cops more than you can imagine (not the good ones, I mean the jerks that park near my street at the end of the month in the hopes of getting as many tickets written as possible). I wonder if he has had any bad run ins himself. Also I like the idea of him exploring the abuse of power and what motivates people like that.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 10:27:42 AM CDT

    this man is too cool, infact I'll pay to see spirit..

    by ironic_name

    ..because of his style.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 10:40:09 AM CDT

    Great Job Beaks

    by sakurai

    Good Interview.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 11:41:24 AM CDT

    hmmm

    by fartedinthefaceofhollywood

    i like Samuel L. Jackson, hes a very universal actor in the sense he can "do it all" and hes not afraid to do a movie just to have fun with it...i like that attitude even if many people out there find it stupid and think acting should be taken seriously at every moment in an actors career. this movie however, it looks so...."DONE BEFORE", as in...similar if not same premise, just different circumstances. this reminds of a harsher "Changing Lanes" which oddly enough...starred Samuel L. Jackson.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 12:14:37 PM CDT

    I love Sam Jackson

    by subtlety

    Great actor, fun performer, smart guy who can be thoughtful without being pretentious. And he was far and away the best thing about the prequels. If the guy makes a hundred more movies this year, it'll be too few. Although, I worry that his love of fun flicks has the downside of making people think of him as a kind of angry-black-guy caricature, which is a shame. I'd love for him to do more character-driven work, smaller roles, less genre films. Oh, what am I talking about? If he stopped making stuff likes 'Snakes' I'd be a very sad man.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 12:49:37 PM CDT

    My next door neighbor..

    by harold-sherbort

    ..is a psycho pedophile. I'll probably see it. I can take or leave Mr. Jackson though.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:00:47 PM CDT

    Sam Jackson is the man!

    by el gooche

    I love his enthusiasm and passion for his profession. If the rest of Hollow-wood was more like him we probably wouldn't be stuck with all these shitty "remakes" of other shitty movies.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:13:16 PM CDT

    Cops are not good neighbors

    by guy gaduois

    Especially when they party. The Shield is only good on TV; in your neighborhood, it's bad. Bullets in a beer can being shook outside your kids' window at 3 am bad.
    There are lots of ways to de-fuse conflict, but if you don't have a gun and a badge like the egomaniac you're having conflict with, you will lose.
    This movie doesn't seem escapist to me. BTDT, called IAD. Replaced my truck tires and the fuzz moved out of my 'hood. Got pulled over w/no write up 6 times in 3 mos, and I'm a 40 year old white dude. My friends of color won't drive anywhere with me; they say I'm bad luck. Yeah, I'll pass on this one.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:44:18 PM CDT

    Surprisingly good movie

    by freakemovie

    I thought it was going to be one of those painful to watch movies, but it's really involving and entertaining. And I love that line in the trailer: "He has the color issue on his side. And that color is...blue."

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:47:33 PM CDT

    Rogue cop movies - if Hollywood had any balls...

    by the kusabi

    ...they'd make a movie about this sort of cop - http://tinyurl.com/3pqseh

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 1:52:35 PM CDT

    He seems like a splendid fellow

    by the rabbit of carrot shaped doom

    I rather like Mr Jackson.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 2:36:51 PM CDT

    What a chill dude

    by mefrog

    He has my total respect now. He's also absolutely right - acting is his profession and passion, why shouldn't he be in three or four films a year?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 2:50:16 PM CDT

    If you like rogue cops...

    by fiester

    Just rent The Shield on DVD. Nothing better.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 3:00:52 PM CDT

    I have had it with these motherfuckin' yuppies...

    by meglos

    ...in my motherfuckin' suburb!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 4:07:02 PM CDT

    Don't think so

    by drunken rage

    Regardless of whether SLJ makes almost every movie better, this sounds like "Unlwaful Entry 2" or "Pacific Heights 2." No, thanks.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 5:04:19 PM CDT

    Get this motherfuckin' mixed marriage out of my...

    by kirbymanly

    ... motherfuckin' neighborhood!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 5:43:48 PM CDT

    Sam, you're a class act.

    by archive

    What's more, we all know it. Thanks for so many experiences, and thanks for having such a great impact on the other folks in the industry. And thanks for Black Snake Moan!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 11:20:11 PM CDT

    Awkward interview???

    by potsmokinalien

    Micodin, did you read beyond the golf conversation? I've never read an interview with Sam Jack this relaxed and digressive. If some stilted chatter about golf is what it takes to get there, fuckin chatter away.I would also like to say that this movie looks fucking hilarious.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 17, 2008 11:42:26 PM CDT

    GTA

    by anakin whoopass

    First thing seeing SLJ in the LAPD uniform made me think of was his Officer Tenpenny from Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. I never really thought about that character's home life but maybe it's like this movie.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 18, 2008 1:34:22 AM CDT

    Guy Gaduois

    by p0llk4t

    Not to be rude...but called IAD on cops...that was not smart. You would have been much better off moving, and you should probably leave your state. You don't mess with the biggest gang around.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 18, 2008 3:20:08 PM CDT

    this movie shouldve been R rated

    by jimmyjoe redsky

    hollywood slaps pg13 on nearly everything now - even tense adult dramas like this - why? - would a 13 year old want to see this movie? - the people in charge of rating movies (or cutting them up to meet the new pg13 standard) are dumb assholes - if "do the right thing" were made today it would be cut up to be a p13 bore - any movie about a nosy neighbor control freak cop intimidating the new bi racial couple next door should be R rated - real life is R rated

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 18, 2008 8:33:57 PM CDT

    A true artist

    by star hump

    The last Sam picture I saw was Black Snake Moan. Enjoyed it immensely. That one should go down among his "greatest hits." Nice interview, Mr. Beaks.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 18, 2008 9:10:05 PM CDT

    Sam is great!

    by darth thoth

    Thanks Beaks... that was a great and actually really inspiring read. Sam, I know you are a fan of AICN so if you're reading this- keep up the great work my brother. God bless!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Sep 19, 2008 12:47:31 AM CDT

    Why not bring up Unbreakable?

    by liljuniorbrown

    I mean that's like the mother of all unfinished trilogies. On a different note, here in my home town there is a funeral parlor owned by a man named Samuel l Jackson. Atleast thats what he goes by and thats what the name on the sign reads "Samuel L Jackson's funeral home". I gotta take a picture one of these days.

    Reply to Talkback

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