Friday May 16, 11:07 AM
Hollywood boys who just don't want to grow up
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - When to slow down and retire? For
most people in their 60s the decision is a no-brainer -- the
sooner the better. But in the rare air of movie stardom, where
careers are fueled by a mix of talent, ego, vanity and,
sometimes, cosmetic surgery, it seems to be a far harder
decision.
Hollywood's latest example is Harrison Ford, 65, the aging
archeologist hero of "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull," which debuts around the globe next week after
its world premiere at the Cannes film festival.
But Ford is not alone in trying to maintain an image as a
strapping young action hero. Movie icons from the 1960s and
1970s from Al Pacino to Sylvester Stallone still insist on
winning the day and getting the girl -- even if she's 40 years
younger. Even Robert De Niro has taken questionable roles
lately, playing a cross-dressing flying pirate in "Stardust."
A few, notably Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty and Clint
Eastwood, seem to have accepted the idea that their leading man
status is now well behind them. Beatty is now a sort of elder
statesman in Hollywood. Eastwood is an Oscar-winning director,
and Nicholson is, well, Nicholson.
Ford is luckier than most. After a long string of dismal
thrillers and dramas, the star is back in a role which, in
three previous Indiana Jones movies that ending with "Indiana
Jones and the Last Crusade 19 years ago, have generated around
$1.1 billion at global box offices.
"Suddenly he's cool again and on every magazine cover in
America," notes Leonard Maltin, "Entertainment Tonight's" film
critic/historian. "But without that role maybe he'd be in the
same boat as the others."
Moreover, early word on "Crystal Skull" is that Ford and
creators Steven Spielberg and George Lucas have insisted "Indy"
roughly match Ford in age. Some of the heavy lifting on the
action front goes to Shia La Beouf, his 21 year-old co-star.
QUALITY VERSUS QUANTITY
For some aging icons, the name of the Hollywood fame game
now seems to be "Take The Money And Run." De Niro and Pacino,
in particular, have been pilloried for career choices over the
past decade that include "Gigli," "Godsend" and the aptly-named
"Two for the Money."
"De Niro has to support a lot of family, the Tribeca Film
Festival, and his whole little empire of hotels and
restaurants," said Todd McCarthy, chief film critic for show
business magazine, Daily Variety.
"I guess that was his prime motive, because in the early
part of his career he seemed to be very shrewd about what parts
he'd select and what directors he'd work with," McCarthy said.
McCarthy added that for people like Ford, being called "The
Sexiest Man In The World" as a young star in magazines gives
them an image that is hard to give up.
The result is the spectacle of a 68-year-old star like
Pacino surrounded by young women in "88 Minutes," his latest
film, which was panned by critics.
Clinging to public exposure is nothing new for stars, and
in some cases it can pay unexpected dividends. In the early
1960s, Bette Davis and Joan Crawford teamed up for what was
seen at the time as a somewhat tacky, if entertaining film,
"Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?"
"It was such a hit that it led to something of a fad of
casting aging actresses in grotesque or horror-type movies,"
said Maltin. "Even Olivia de Havilland, Debbie Reynolds and
Shelley Winters did them."
JACK, MERYL, GEORGE AND BRAD
Maltin noted that in youth-oriented Hollywood, few films
with big Hollywood budgets and wide releases are being written
for 60- to 70-year-old actors. Even Nicholson, 71, "did an Adam
Sandler comedy and his 'The Bucket List,' was the most
sentimental movie he's ever made," notes Maltin.
Still, "Bucket List" proved to be a box office hit, and
Nicholson has been able to mix big Hollywood films like "List"
with award-winning fare such as "About Schmidt."
Meryl Streep also has survived poor movies and managed to
expand her already formidable range. She gamely appeared in the
Farrelly Brothers' farce "Stuck On You," and then effortlessly
stole scenes from young star Anne Hathaway in "The Devil Wears
Prada," earning wide critical acclaim.
"An actor likes to act," Maltin adds. "One might even say
he HAS to act, and for many of them I reckon it's a question of
taking the least objectionable choice at a given moment, in
order to stay in the public eye and stay in the game."
Maltin sees another factor in the equation. "Hollywood
movies are getting dumber and dumber by the year," he said.
That news doesn't bode well for stars in their 40s like
George Clooney or Brad Pitt or nearing that age, like
37-year-old Matt Damon. Unless, that is, they move onto
directing, producing or, like former "Terminator" Arnold
Schwarzenegger, go into politics.
Ask Clooney, who is about to direct his fourth film, if he
plans to direct more and act less in the future, and he doesn't
hesitate. "Yes, I hope to. I like directing and it's infinitely
more creative than acting," he said.
Or they could take a cue from the legendary Cary Grant,
said McCarthy.
"Even though he still looked great, he just stopped and
walked away at 62 when he realized he was 40-plus years older
than his leading ladies. He just wouldn't do it anymore."
(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Eddie Evans)
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