Tag Archives: Bradley Cooper

Interview: Sienna Miller talks ‘American Sniper’

 Sienna Miller in 'American Sniper' 2 (photo Warner Bros)

For acclaimed actress Sienna Miller, playing Taya Kyle, the wife of the most prolific sniper in American military history, Chris Kyle, has involved roller coaster of emotions. Miller said as an actress, working with director Clint Eastwood has been a personal high; but she also found it tough to enjoy the role because of the story’s tragic ending and lingering, traumatic effects on Taya Kyle after her husband’s untimely death.

One of the effects Taya Kyle has been subject to is the defamation lawsuit filed by former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura, who moved to sue Chris Kyle’s widow after the Navy SEAL was shot to death on a gun range in February 2013. A jury awarded Ventura $1.8 million in July for his claims that he was defamed in Chris Kyle’s “American Sniper” novel.

Calling Ventura’s lawsuit against Taya Kyle “outrageous,” Miller said she didn’t follow the court proceedings since she merely played her on film and didn’t experience the tragedy personally.

“From my point of view, I didn’t follow it through the press,” Miller told me in a recent call from New York. “It seemed wrong, disrespectful and ugly to do so, when the woman really involved in it in a desperate way is still going through all of this.”

The sad thing is, Miller said, Taya Kyle is going to be subject to even more. Ventura has filed an additional lawsuit against the publisher of “American Sniper,” and the man charged with killing Chris Kyle, Eddie Ray Routh, is still awaiting trial.

“I just can’t bear to think about it. My heart just breaks for Taya,” Miller said of the mother of two. “But she’s an amazing and resilient woman. She’s capable of strength that I don’t know that many people have. I’m there to support her.”

The Ventura book passage and subsequent trial is not chronicled in the “American Sniper” film.

Starring Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle, “American Sniper” will open in New York, Los Angeles and Dallas Christmas Day, and across the country Jan. 16. Look for the full interview with Miller next month.

Interview: Michael Rooker talks ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’

Like his acclaimed role as the anti-hero, Merle Dixon, in “The Walking Dead,” Michael Rooker is finding himself in the middle again – but this time he’s a blue-skinned alien in Marvel Studio’s “Guardians of the Galaxy,” light years away from the zombie-infested, post-apocalyptic Earth of the popular AMC series.

Rooker’s “Galaxy” character, Yondu, is interesting in that he’s not an out-an-out bad guy, and in some ways, he has a propensity to be good. Walking that fine line is something Rooker, 59, has not only enjoyed in several projects throughout his storied career, but his whole life, and director James Gunn wanted to tap into that experience.

“James wanted to write something for me that I’m good at — I’m good at doing bad things and still having people like me,” Rooker told me, laughing, in a recent interview. “Even as a 10- or 12-year-old, I’d be doing something bad, like climbing trees, and people would yell at me for doing it yet be smiling at the same time. I never understood what was going on with them. The great thing is, it still happening.  James wanted to me to have the ability to say and do anything on screen and still have people like me, and dig the performance and dig the way I do it.”

Michael Rooker in Guardians of the Galaxy (photo -- Disney-Marvel Studios)

Rooker brings a good ol’ boy approach to Yondu, a space pirate who takes Peter Quill from Earth as a young boy after his mother’s death. After growing up and learning the ways of Yondu’s group, the Ravagers, Quill (Chris Pratt) betrays his mentor and keeps for himself a mysterious orb he’s stolen from a powerful space lord, only to learn the sphere holds powers far greater than he ever could have imagined.

Like his fellow “Galaxy” cast mates (including Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Bradley Cooper and Vin Diesel), Rooker has the unenviable task of portraying a beloved character whose origins date back more than four decades in the original Marvel comic books. And while he respects the fan’s opinions, Rooker said it was a necessity to make changes with the character of Yondu for the sake of the film.

“I don’t really worry about all of the reactions, but of course, it’s always there in the back of my head,” Rooker said. “I know there will be some people who will be disappointed that Yondu doesn’t have a big fin on the top of his head, but they have to realize the roof on my spaceship is pretty low. I would have had to duck when I was walking around for the entire production. The change was decided before I got there, and basically I had to take what was in the script and run with it.”

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For anyone familiar with his character in “The Walking Dead,” Rooker has been the subject of makeup artists before as a zombified Merle, so he knew was he was in for to turn Yondu blue.

“We’d start with a three hours of makeup, then we had a little break for food before more makeup and wardrobe, so in total, it was about five-and-a-half hours each time,” Rooker recalled. “That’s not so bad. For my role in ‘Slither’ (a 2006 horror comedy, which was also directed by Gunn), it took seven hours to put on and two-and-a-half to take off. Yondu’s makeup only took 45 minutes to take off.”

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And while extensive makeup is a part of the job that some actors dread, Rooker said he loves the process and has absolutely no complaints about it.

“When I go to work, I get to go to a set. It’s like a 12-year-old kid saying goodbye to his parents, running out the door and playing all day long, and coming back for supper at night,” Rooker enthused. “That’s my life now. When I go to the set, it’s like going to a playground and doing all kinds of stuff.”

And lucky for Rooker, those sets have been filled with a variety of roles in several different genres.

“With ‘Guardians’ I get to be a blue alien who whistles to use a great weapon. In ‘Eight Men Out’ I got to play baseball all day long and on ‘Days of Thunder’ I got to drive race cars. In ‘Henry (Portrait of a Serial Killer)’ I got to kill people,” Rooker said with a laugh. “You get to use your imagination all these sorts of crazy, creative ways. Some ways are quite dramatic, some are hokey and some are fun. You just get to go everywhere.”

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