Arm At The Movies Pollack Wide Open ALICE BURDICK SCHWEIGER Special to the Jewish News IV hen Sydney Pollack was asked to take on one of the featured roles in the sexual thriller Eyes Wide Shut, he couldn't refuse. The opportu- nity to work with director Stanley Kubrick and superstars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman was too hard to pass up. "Kubrick was a world legend, and I knew working with him would be a great thrill," says Pollack, 65, who considers himself more of a director and producer than an actor. "To observe a guy like Kubrick — someone whose films I have been aware of all my life — was a terrific opportu- nity. As for Tom and Nicole, Cruise is a wonderful guy whom I worked with on The Firm. I am terribly fond of him and have enormous respect for his abil- ity. I think he is more than just a movie star — he's a sensational actor. I think the same of Nicole. In the movie, they both did a spectacular job." Eyes Wide Shut, based on the 1927 Arthur Schnitzler novella Thzurnnovelle ("Dream Story"), is set in New York City at Christmas time, although the movie was shot in London. Cruise and Kidman, who are husband and wife off screen, play a wealthy happily married couple, Dr. William and Alice Hartford. The Hartford marriage is first tested at a party held at the mansion of their host, played by Sydney Pollack, with, as reviewer Andrew Walker writes in London's Evening Standard, "the man- ner of a pugnacious millionaire tycoon from the pages of the Forbes 500 set." When the Hartfords each wind up flirting with some of the other guests, the couple segue into revealing to each other their erotic dreams and fantasies, and go on to confront temptation and sexual experimentation around the corridors of Manhattan. Filled with nudity and erotic fantasies, Eyes Wide Shut, writes Walker, a Kubrick biogra- pher and friend of the family, "is sure to spark controversy. " 7/16 1999 PO n.trnit Director/Producer/Actor Sydney Pollack talks about his role in "Eyes Wide Shut." zw Sydney PolLick: Well-known as a director, he plays a role in Stanley Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut." Indeed, there has been plenty of buzz surrounding the movie, and Pollack guesses that with Kubrick as director, its sure to be a box-office hit. "Every movie Kubrick made has become a clas- sic," says Pollack, of his "phone friend." "So we all assumed when working with Stanley [that] we were in for another classic." Pollack recently told the New York Times that his "initial take on [his] part [in Eyes Wide Shut) was very dif- ferent from what Stanley wanted. I came in with the idea of being tougher with the character [played by] Tom, because he had done something that I disapproved of strongly. "And then Stanley had an idea of my wanting to manipulate him more, and therefore be kinder, and he was very specific about how to communi- cate that. He knew I was another direc- tor — he didn't have to beat around the bush. He wasn't trying to work any psychological tricks with me. And he was crazy about both Tom and Nicole." Commenting on Kubrick's unex- pected death last March, Pollack says, "Stanley had finished the picture and had been editing it for about six months before he died. I talked to him on Tuesday and he died early Saturday. His death was a terrible shock to everyone. The opening is going to be bittersweet without Stanley and we are all aoina b to miss him." For Pollack, being in a successful movie is nothing new. In the span of his celebrated career, 17 of his films have received a total of 46 Academy Award nominations and went on to win seven Oscars. Pollack garnered two for himself — Best Director and Best Picture for 1985's Out OfAfrica, which he also produced. But Pollack's life hasn't always been as upbeat as his career. Born July 1, 1934, in Lafayette, Ind., Pollack grew up feeling like an outsider. "When I was young in the 1950s, Indiana had a lot of anti- Semitism," recalls Pollack. "It's not that anyone beat me up because I was Jewish, but there were many offensive