10 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 26, 1999 'Limey' actor Stamp stars with himself Cage seeks thrills to. balance intense roles Newsday NEW YORK - Terence Stamp, who happens to be wearing a Hawaiian shirt, is talking about his vacation. With his girlfriend. On Kauai. On the beach. At one of those purposefully remote resorts with very limited access to telephones. And where his agent still managed to reach him with a message to call Steven Soderbergh. "So," Stamp says, "armed with a load of quarters, we went into the lit- tle village and got through to 8 1 8 in the Valley, and there I was, talking to Soderbergh. "I just thought it was was some eccentric Englishman, some small part that he wanted me for," Stamp continues. "But suddenly he's explaining this story, this thriller, and how he's going to use this old footage from my early movie. All the time he was talking to me, my mind was racing ahead and thinking, 'Nobody's ever done this, it's just a wonderfully ingenious idea.' And while I'm thinking, there's this long pause and Steven finally says, 'Well ... what do you think?' I said, 'IT'S REAT!! IT'S GREAT!! ..."' More than a few people are agree- rng. "The Limey," Soderbergh's lat- est, pro\ ides Stamp his most potent ole in years - certainly the most rominent since his transsexual turn n "The Adventures of Priscilla, ueen of the Desert" (1994). But hile "The Limey" contains many f the elements that made oderbergh's last film, "Out of fight," such a critical and popular hit - action, humor, suspense and creatively nonsequential editing - it also includes a ferocious perfor- mance by Stamp and the novel pportunity to play more or less opposite himself. The title character, a hardened professional criminal amed Wilson, arrives in Los Angeles looking to avenge his daughter's death. Intercut with the scenes Soderbergh shot for "The Limey" are scenes from "Poor Cow" (1967), English director Ken Loach's first feature, a largely improvised film Shat featured a young Terence Stamp. And while the "Poor Cow" segments would work in any case as melancholy flashbacks, they also have the quality of home movies. "I have this pictorial memory of Ken," Stamp says, "just before action, leaping through the set squirting tal- cum powder into the air, to cut the glamour of the color." As the "Poor Cow" cuts show, Stamp was one of the most beautiful actors ever to appear onscreen. And he remains a spectacularly hand- some man - not the angelic Adonis he was when he debuted in Peter Ustinov's "Billy Budd" back in 1962, perhaps, but good-looking enough to share screen tim e with his own 30-years-younger self. Plus, he has enormous confidence in Soderbergh, whose ease of direction, he says, "was like watching Fred Astaire dance." Soderbergh was less sanguine about the film after it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May. When it was suggested that the film would be an easy sell - given Stamp's powerful acting, the pulp- fiction aspects of the story, the pace, the plot - Soderbergh balked. "No, I don't think it's an easy sell at all," Soderbergh said. "Nobody in the film" - which co-stars Peter Fonda, Barry Newman and Lesley Ann Warren - "is under 50. That's a hard sell." Stamp sees it another way. "I guess what I really think is that good stuff is a hard sell," he says. "I think it's easier to sell a movie than it is to sell a film. But I have such admiration for Soderbergh. I think that he's one of the great American filmmakers. I watch him - it's like watching the infancy of a William Wyler or a John Ford. So I don't think his films are ever going to be a hard sell, providing he can contain himself within a certain restricted budget. Because if he can make a film like this for this much money, there's more than enough Steven Soderbergh fans in the world to make a profit." Stamp - who has worked with several of the world's great direc- tors, including Wyler (one of the actor's better-known films is 1965's "The Collector") - believes that limitations truly make for better cin- ema. He recalls telling that to David Lean during a dinner in Rome in the 1960s. ("With the exception of ne Allentown Moning Call From 1995's Oscar-winning perfor- mance in "Leaving Las Vegas," to action films ("Face/ Off," "Con Air," "The Rock") to thrillers ("8mm," "Snake Eyes"), to earlier work ("Wild at Heart"), Nicholas Cage has imbued his roles with a barely controlled anger. Even in comedies ("Moonstruck," "Raising Arizona," "Peggy Sue Got Married"), Cage has been ... intense. You can see the rage at work in his lat- est movie. "Bringing Out the Dead," directed by Martin Scorsese. In the gritty city drama, the first film Cage has made with his wife, Patricia Arquette, he stars as a disillusioned New York paramedic. With a screenplay by Paul Schrader (with whom Scorsese col- laborated on "Taxi Driver"), the movie is based on a novel by Joe Connelly. When he decided to do the film, Cage didn't know Arquette would star oppo- site him as a young woman whose heart- attack victim father he rescues. "That was something that totally came from Scorsese. He really felt she (Arquette) had the right style for the part," Cage says. Cage and Arquette have wanted to do a film together, but there were details to work out. What would be the on-set pro- tocol? Notes Cage: "Do we have sepa- rate trailers? We figured out we would keep it separate so that when we were acting we wouldn't do anything that would throw each other off. "I knew that working with Patricia, I wouldn't really be able to fake it because she knows me so well," he laughs. "When you're that intimate with some- body, you really can't act. We were like each other's truth barometers." Cage says he witnessed Arquette's professionalism first- hand during the filmmaking, saying she's a considerate actor who wants everyone to do well. "I've worked with many actors and actresses where they're out there trying to sabotage the other person so they look better," he notes. After a week of filming, Cage says the couple was able to leave their characters on the set. "I've found over the years that when your acting is really working, you're not all-consumed by it. You have an objective point of view. At the end of the day, I was able to switch gears, go home and be supportive." At the time, that was especially important to Arquette. At the start of filming, her father was in the hospital, recuperating from a liver transplant. Her mother had died six months earlier. Cage saw a positive aspect to art imi- tating life for him and his wife. He tc Arquette, he says, "'Let's count our- selves as being fortunate that we have a productive place to put this grief, rather than a destructive place. You can take these feelings and you can do something good with them.' It was like a gift, real- There were moments of celebration, too. When Arquette's film "Stigmata" went to No. 1 last summer on its opening weekend, the couple had a champagne toast at home. While Cage has hadO number of hits, this was a first for Arquette ("Ethan Frome," "True Romance," "Ed Wood," "Lost Highway"). "Bringing out the Dead" marks the first time Cage worked with Scorsese, although they met years ago through Cage's uncle, director Francis Ford Coppola. "You're in such a zone when you' working with Scorsese. There's such adrenaline there. You're not really think- ing about the difficulties." Cage says that, while the all-night filming in New York was grueling, he had fun zooming down the city's nearly empty streets. Sti 11, that doesn't compare to the thrill he gets behind the wheel of his Ferrari$F- 40 at the Willow Springs, Calif., race- track. Cage practices with Robert Carradine. "He's an actor, but he consig ers himself a professional race-car driver first. And he has, in fact, won a lot of races for Lotus." Cage also has a Lamborghini and-a 400-horsepower, aluminum-bodied Jaguar E Type which has been in the winner's circle (10 victories). "I'm not anywhere ready to enter a race, but if I had another solid month I could enter a couple of historic races first and th maybe the Ferrari Challenge. "The first day I was terrible. I spun out. I got it up to about 150 (mph) on turn eight at Willow, and the straight- away, about 165 (mph). "It's a new world for me. I don't know how far I want to take it." Cage says his thrill-seeking hobbies are a way of relieving the intensity. Appropriately enough, Cage's next film, Jerry Bruckheimer's "Gone in 60 Seconds," is about fast cars and fast; thieves. Associated Press "The Limey" provides Terence Stamp with his most potent role in years. 'Lawrence of Arabia,' I don't think Lean's big-budget pictures were any improvement on his 'Oliver Twist' and 'Great Expectations."') He remembers Joseph Losey telling him about the creative advan- tages of poverty and how Stephen Frears once claimed he'd never make a movie for more than S5 million or S6 million ("And the next time I saw him, he'd agreed to do 'Hero' with Dustin Hoffman and the truth was it was the least good of his movies.") Given the "penury" in which Stamp grew up and the unlikelihood of his eventual stardom, his outlook makes a lot of sense. "We were very aware of our posi- tion," he says of his family. "When it came to something like acting, it was, 'People like us don't do things like that' - which my dad actually said to me. So when I was taken up and got my first film break, I thought, 'I must always think about a long career,' because it would have been devastating if I had to go back to driving a minicab after a year. I didn't want to be flavor of the month. "And then I guess the great chal- lenge to me all my life, all my career, was the hope to find a part that combined the strongest ele- ments of myself with the gentlest elements of myself and I'd never found that; it'd always been one or the other and before this came along, I'd given up hope. So when 'The Limey' came up it was so over- whelming that I thought, I mustn't blow this, I mustn't get anxious. This isn't me, this is me playing Steve McQueen. High intensity, low tension." He quotes the poet Terence, who won his freedom from slavery through verse. "I am a man and nothing living is alien to me." A bet- ter motto for an actor? Like Stamp's life itself, it's something hard to imagine. r s ,,:.. ,. . -: 0