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Mr. Beaks Talks SUPER 8, Bob Feller And Life After Dillon With Kyle Chandler!

Published at:  Jun 10, 2011 12:51:16 PM CDT

It's a beautiful Sunday afternoon in West Hollywood, and I'm sitting in a suite at the Four Seasons nervously repeating the same two words over and over in my head: "Kyle Chandler, Kyle Chandler, Kyle Chandler...". Creepy, I know, but if I don't sear the man's name into my cerebral cortex, there is an excellent chance that, at some point during our interview, I'm going to call him Coach Taylor. And then he'll give me that glare of extreme, how-could-you-let-me-down-after-all-I've-done-for-you disappointment. And then I'll feel awful. And then he'll make me run laps around the hotel.

Chandler's Eric Taylor on FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS is, to my mind, one of the all-time great television dads: stern, principled, and yet vulnerable in the face of adversity - of which there was plenty during the show's superb (and, sadly, just-concluded) five-season run. Chandler brought a rugged decency to the character; in fact, his Taylor was probably too compassionate to survive the crucible of Texas high school football. But the show was so perceptive about small-town life in America that you didn't mind. You wanted to believe there are more Eric Taylors out there.

When J.J. Abrams was looking for a tough, but ultimately loving father figure to anchor his kids-on-a-mission fantasy, it's only natural that the veteran television producer would look to the small screen for his man. And Chandler, who'd already demonstrated via small, but memorable roles in THE KINGDOM and KING KONG that he belonged in movies, comes through in a big way in SUPER 8. Though the deputy sheriff character of Jackson Lamb is significantly colder than Taylor (he's coped with the sudden death of his wife by disappearing into his job, alienating his son Joe in the process), we can see the kind, loving father lurking behind the brusque exterior. This isn't the writing; this is Chandler. It's a movie star turn that, hyperbole be damned, brings to mind Gary Cooper; he's a throwback actor for a throwback movie.

In person, Chandler is sincere and deeply humble, but there's also a searching quality that is only hinted at in his recent work. When we finished the interview, he graciously asked if he'd given me a useful answer to my final question, hoping he'd been understood, but also making sure that I had what I needed. It was almost as if he was worried he'd let me down. Impossible. Good as he's been over his twenty-plus-year career, I think Chandler's still got some surprises left. Let's hope Hollywood gives him a shot, rather than more of the same.

  

Mr. Beaks: How did this role get offered to you?

Kyle Chandler: I was in town, and I was going to the airport that day. My manager called and said, "J.J. Abrams is doing something, so, if you have interest, before you leave town could you go in and audition for it?" Well, of course I had interest. So I went in to audition, and then I went back to Texas. And then he called me and said, "You've got the part if you want it, but you don't get to see the script until you come to the set." So I was like, "Okay." (Laughs)
It's fun working with J.J., because he knows how I did FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS and how we shot. I love moving along, and I like the unknown. I've learned now to get out of rehearsal mode: you come to the set, you know your character 100%, you know your lines 100%, and you begin. [J.J.] knew that somehow, so he would often say, "Do you want a rehearsal?" And of course I'd always be, "No, no." But you find out so much when you screw up in the first rehearsal when it's live, as opposed to a rehearsal that's not live, because you're putting it all out there. So going up there and not seeing a script on top of it is another oddity about him. I love it. I love the fact that he's the way he is, and I think it shows in all of his work, too.

Beaks: So you were discovering your character as you shot the film?

Chandler: Absolutely. And he's that type of director who I think is pretty diverse. I think he could probably work with anyone. I like working with that. And he seemed to just shoot from the hip: see what we get, and tweak it if need be, but maybe something really great is going to come up.
He obviously works well with kids. And that's because he's so damn intelligent. I mean, you've seen his movies. He can direct. He knows. He's got the vision, as well as the eye for seeing how scenes are going to come together. He's directing, editing, writing... he's doing everything at once, and you can almost hear his brain humming along. But when he's working with the kids, you can see he's not working with kids; he's working with young actors. And in working with young actors, he works with a great amount of respect - which I think allows them to have respect in their own work, and to have that discipline to say, "Now I've got this responsibility." That's the way it should be. Some of the best acting ever, when you see kids in a movie... well, THE BAD SEED first of all. The little girl in THE BAD SEED was awesome. And of course TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD.

Beaks: Some of the most indelible child performances ever.

Chandler: Yeah! Just wonderful. But these guys [in SUPER 8] are incredible, too. And for Joel [Courtney] to have never done anything before, that's pretty daunting. Ten years from now, someone's going to say, "Hey, what did you in the year 2011." And he's going to say, "Well, let me tell you. In 2011, I had my first blockbuster movie come out!"

Beaks: I don't think he'll have to explain it. I think people will just know that's where it began. Speaking of first-timers, I interviewed Riley Griffiths last week.

Chandler: (In a deep voice) "Riley. Riley didn't always talk like this." (Laughs) And he wasn't taller than me the last time I saw him either.

Beaks: I guess he slimmed out like his character said he would in the movie.

Chandler: Yeah.

Beaks: Riley said they had a lot of fun on the set. He said there was some ding-dong ditching going on.

Chandler: Yeah, they were ding-dong ditching me, the little bastards. I never could catch them.

Beaks: Oh yeah?

Chandler: No! They were fast! They're fast kids! And Riley plays his role so well, too. You believe him. You believe him outside of being who he his, his character in the movie. He plays the director wonderfully. He's really into it. All of those guys are so good. You really want to be with them. My character would've been the kid who wanted to blow everything up [Cary, played by Ryan Lee]. That was me. And Ryan's a great guy, too. He's a neat kid. They're all such good actors. And Elle Fanning. You can't forget Elle Fanning. Man, when she puts that scene together at the train station before the train derails, what she does right there... that's the whole story right there from that side of the show. It all just gels. She's really, really good.

Beaks: And her zombie moment with Joel. That's magical.

Chandler: She is a wonderful actress.

Beaks: Looking at your career, it's interesting to me how some television actors steadily acquire a following over multiple shows. There's a group of people who remember you from TOUR OF DUTY. And then there's HOMEFRONT - where you played for the Cleveland Indians, I should add...

Chandler: I've still got a jacket that Bob Feller signed. I was on THE MORNING EXCHANGE, and I talked to him. Oddly enough, I told him that a friend of mine, Trent, his grandfather used to play baseball. Unfortunately, I didn't know the whole story when I was on THE MORNING EXCHANGE. Trent's grandfather's name was Skeeter Newsome. Skeeter Newsome was the first player in the big leagues to wear a helmet because Bob Feller beaned him, and [Skeeter] was never the same again. Trent didn't tell me his grandfather, Skeeter Newsome, was beaned in the head with a ball and all of that other stuff. So when I asked Bob Feller that, man... I'm glad he signed the jacket before I asked him that, because afterwards I don't think he was going to want to give me a signed jacket. (Laughs) I got a little upset with my buddy Trent when I got back to L.A.

Beaks: Wow. That had to be a haunting moment for Feller.

Chandler: Yeah. I've seen pictures, too. And, man, Skeeter looks just like my brother Trent.

Beaks: So there's HOMEFRONT. Then there was EARLY EDITION. And on to FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS. Do you feel like there was some kind of logical progression or design in building to this moment in your career?

Chandler: Man, I don't know. To go from FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS to [SUPER 8], it's a blessing. I've got the greatest career. Peter Berg said to me one day, "Dude, how do you do it? You're constantly working, but no one knows who you are." I don't mind that too much. My biggest goals when I came out to Los Angeles were to be married and have a family, and be able to afford to live as an actor. That's what I do now. And little by little, I keep working with these people. This time it's J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg. I'm not going to question it. I don't know what I'm going to do next, and I don't care. Everything just keeps going. Like my pop used to say, "Just listen to your gut." That's what I do. In for the long haul; the rest is all just trappings. But to be able to work with these guys, that's pretty fortunate on my part, I'll tell you.

Beaks: But building off of FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS, the movie star thing is just starting to happen for you. I think you've got a classic presence. Do you look to any movie stars and say, "That's the career I'd like to have?"

Chandler: I don't think about it like that at all. I don't place upon myself, "Oh, I'm going to be a movie star now." I don't even know what a movie star truly is, other than a movie star is someone everyone knows and he's in all the tabloids, and he's a great actor because he's a movie star!!! I don't know that I want to be a movie star in that sense. But if I can keep working with folks like this, and carry on in my career, and still have a family, and move on, I'll keep rolling along with the hits. There are some careers that I look at, but it's mostly for the longevity and the variety of work. I'm still learning. Each one of these is an acting class to me. I've got a long road to go.

 

SUPER 8 opens in theaters today.

Faithfully submitted,

Mr. Beaks



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    Readers Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 12:54:14 PM CDT

    There is starting to be..

    by professor murder

    too much super 8 stuff on this site.
    I know everyone wants their two cents review up, but damn, everyday we have super 8 on the grill, heheh

    Reply to Talkback

  • I'm talking about a reality show with Jar Jar Binks, the Twins from Transformers, Howard the Duck, Mac, Mr. Tumnus, and Paris from Troy.

    The show material you decide.

    On second thought, I guess this wouldn't be 'reality' though.....
    But hell, most reality tv is scripted now anyways..

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:01:53 PM CDT

    Does Beaks just walk from studio building to studio building?

    by cookylamoo

    Grabbing anyone he sees and shoving a microphone in their face?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:02:03 PM CDT

    Great summer popcorn flick!

    by you_have_my_voice

    Saw this last night at a "sneak preview" (really, the movie was running since 11am yesterday, it wasn't a sneak, it opened on Thursday). Awesome time. Great fun.

    Great interview with Chandler. FNL made me a big fan. Like you said, he's got that quiet intensity where he can communicate so much just through a glare, or a glance, or with just his face, no matter how loud he's speaking. Qualities of a great actor. I hope he gets more lead roles from this.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:04:56 PM CDT

    Most people recognize him as the Friday Night Lights guy

    by seasider

    but I always see him as Gary Hobson from Early Edition.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:31:37 PM CDT

    Great actor

    by nygfaninva

    Love him in FNL. Heard he was up for the lead in the adaptation of Bendis' Powers, hope he gets it. Also hope he met Spielberg, this way if Steven ever remakes Jaws he knows who to cast as Brody!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:37:37 PM CDT

    Fucking Class Act, Man

    by crow3711

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:39:42 PM CDT

    Clear eyes, full hearts

    by bass ackwards

    Can't lose! I'll be a Coach Taylor...er, Kyle Chandler fan for life just based on FNL.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 1:42:03 PM CDT

    I see the Avatar effect all over again...

    by doom master

    Super 8 this and Super 8 that...Spielberg getting head...Etc Etc...


    Realy this movie is all about the attack of a lensflare...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 2:44:35 PM CDT

    God I love this guy!

    by the_genteel_gentile

    Kyle Chandler's Coach Taylor is one of my favorite television characters ever. Right there with Peter Falk's Columbo, David Jensen's Dr. Richard Kimball, Tom Selleck's Thomas Magnum, Scott Bakula's Sam Beckett, Fred Savage's Kevin Arnold, Desi Arnaz's Ricky Ricardo and Homer Simpson.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 3:45:35 PM CDT

    Filming of Super 8 in Weirton, WV

    by fromwv

    http://weirtonislillian.blogspot.com/ This is an amateur article written by a fan about the filming of Super 8 last fall in the West Virginia steel town, Weirton, that stands in for Lillian, Ohio in the movie. I watched them film the scene with Kyle Chandler that the still pictured above captures and many more. It's a spoiler free blog written for movie and Bad Robot fans including anecdotes about Chandler, JJ Abrams, Noah Emmerich, and Dan Castellaneta plus exclusive pics. I wrote a love letter to Amblin, Bad Robot, and cinema in general. This is what happens when Hollywood and Bad Robot secrecy take over a small town in your backyard.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 4:14:43 PM CDT

    Is it really just some dancing lights?

    by the green gargantua

    ..........motherfucker..

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 7:25:21 PM CDT

    fromwv

    by misterfurly

    just read the blog, very nice! sounds like a great experience! just saw the movie an hour ago- very close encounters-y! its like you got to see dreyfuss and teri garr do their thing in the 70's- cool!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 7:37:41 PM CDT

    the_genteel_gentile

    by knightrider

    I agree with your list. I've never seen FNL, but Chandler was pretty great as Gary Hobson in Early Edition. I loved that show.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 9:05:34 PM CDT

    KC Story

    by johnnylabamba

    Met him at Lavaca Street in Austin during the first season of FNL. When he walked by, I shouted, "Coach Taylor!" He was wearing a ballcap and in a perfect Coach Taylor tone goes, "That was a good touchdown run last week, son!"

    I shook his hand and told him a scene from the last episode (daughter and the QB were watching TV under a blanket) was dead-on from my high school days. He said he really enjoyed Connie Britton's reaction in that scene.

    Bottom line is, this is a stand-up guy in real life, and I don't think you're going to see any negative talkbacks, even among this cynical bunch. I hope this guy's career explodes post-FNL.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 10, 2011 10:15:05 PM CDT

    Thank You!

    by fromwv

    Thanks for the kind words. Always thought in that context-if you could have been on the set of any of those flicks, Close Encounters, ET, Gremlins, wouldn't you have jumped at the chance? Besides everything Bad Robot has just ruled my imagination since Alias season2.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 1:23:44 AM CDT

    Terrific actor, terrific guy

    by smokingrobot

    I've been a huge fan ever since EARLY EDITION. And Coach Taylor was a character and a performance for the ages.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Kyle Chandler has to play Captain Dan Holland!

    And um don't Vince Vaughn the Durant role.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 2:42:56 AM CDT

    They screwed him over in the 3rd act.

    by dwide shrewd

    **spoiler**

    There was this big set up for Deputy Lamb to rescue not only his son, but his relationship with his son, but they fucked it up. He did nothing. The moment where he embraces Joe and says "I got you" lacked emotional impact because he didn't do a damn thing except show up at the scene after it was over. I know the movie is about the kids, so they wanted the kids to pull off the rescue, but they really missed an opportunity there.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 3:41:17 AM CDT

    To me he has always looked like Bruce Wayne walked off the page

    by kabookieslap

    In another universe he is acting in Batman movies to me.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 6:56:40 AM CDT

    So Kyle Chandler was type-casted again.

    by asimovlives

    Some imaginative casting there, Mr Abrams.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 6:58:41 AM CDT

    He looks like a younger Robert Forster

    by asimovlives

    That was my first though when i first saw a SUEPR 8 trailer. I though "wow, they de-aged Robert Foster pretty good". I couldn't believe it was a different actor, instead of Foster with young man make-up effects.


    Well, if they ever make a remake of THE BLACK HOLE, there he is.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 6:58:53 AM CDT

    test

    by asimovlives

  • Jun 11, 2011 6:59:25 AM CDT

    weird, but inverted commas don't show up in the post titles

    by asimovlives

    anybody knows why's that?

    Reply to Talkback

  • So about every 29 years someone will REINVENT the magical wheel and release another UPDATED RE-IMAGINED version of E.T.

    Can I just skip on this one and try the next one on for size in 29 years?

    Yeah, I'm not so excited about LENS FLARE the Movie.

    Harry can I wait 29 years?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 12:40:02 PM CDT

    Weird career path for this guy.

    by dougmckenzie

    I remember in back on Tour of Duty in the early 90s... then he pretty much disappears for a decade... only to pop up in King Kong and Friday Night Lights. Now he's the lead in a summer tentpole. Good on him to stick it out and come across some late success.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 1:38:42 PM CDT

    Woo-boy, all these lens-flare "jokes" sure are funny.

    by fixxxer

  • Jun 11, 2011 6:11:31 PM CDT

    Cloviebaby the Wonder Years

    by nabster

    JJ Gaybrams has admitted it's the same monster from Cloverfield.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 11, 2011 11:39:38 PM CDT

    Great actor

    by ddman26

    Loved him as Coach Taylor. Deserves to have a long career.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 12, 2011 9:32:23 AM CDT

    For Chandler's sake

    by truxton spanglers cereal cabal

    I hope the movie is a success. Damned fine actor.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Jun 12, 2011 9:48:40 PM CDT

    I thought it was the same exact monster from Cloverfield

    by kabookieslap

    Don't know if that is cool or not.

    Reply to Talkback

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