National Post (National Edition)

More than a one-ring Serkis

- CHRIS KNIGHT National Post

Andy Serkis will forever be remembered as Gollum in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Not only did he originate the role of the classic villain; he helped break ground in the type of performanc­e known as motioncapt­ure, in which actors’ movements are digitized to create a non-human character. He has since done similar work in King Kong, the Planet of the Apes trilogy and Star Wars, where he played Supreme Leader Snoke.

But Andy’s more than a one-ring Serkis. The 53-yearold was at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival this year for the world première of his directing debut, Breathe, the true story of a polio victim (Andrew Garfield) who dealt with paralysis with the help of his wife (Claire Foy). There’s nary a moment of computeriz­ed trickery in the film, except for the clever digital doubling of Tom Hollander, who performs both of a pair of twin brothers.

“It’s just the most beautiful, powerful script I’ve ever read,” says Serkis of Breathe. “And it also happens to be the true story of my business partner ... his parents’ life story.”

Serkis and Jonathan Cavendish are co-founders of The Imaginariu­m, a production company specializi­ng in motion-capture although, like Serkis himself, it is branching out; another TIFF world première, the horror film The Ritual, was produced by The Imaginariu­m.

Cavendish’s father, Robin, was affected by polio in 1958 and spent the rest of his life able to breathe only through a mechanical ventilator. At the time, that meant a life lived in hospital, but Robin moved back home with his wife, Diana, and later helped develop a wheelchair with a built-in ventilator to give him even more freedom.

“Although it’s perhaps not what people might expect from me as my first movie, in fact that’s a good thing,” says Serkis. What people might expect as his first movie, an all-mo-cap version of The Jungle Book, has been held back for additional post-production and to distance itself from 2016’s The Jungle Book. It opens Oct. 19, 2018.

“It’s not a straight-up documentar­y,” Serkis says of Breathe. “It has an artistic, cinematic umbrella over it to allow this story to percolate into a much grander idea, which is that when you’re living two minutes away from death, how much can you live? And that vibrancy is hopefully what I’ve brought to it.”

Serkis drew further if more unusual inspiratio­n from the story of Philippe Petit, the Frenchman who walked between the twin towers of the newly built World Trade Center in 1974. “I was inspired by the Man on Wire Story, and the friends that enabled him to perform that heist. And it felt like this was a heist; this was a heist for life.”

Outside of his new producing and directing roles, Serkis has long been at the centre of a debate over whether motion-capture performanc­es are awardswort­hy. I and other members of the Broadcast Film Critics Associatio­n were recently sent a video from 20th Century Fox, showing beforeand-after comparison­s of Serkis’ performanc­e as the ape Caesar in the latest Planet of the Apes movie.

The BFCA gave Serkis a best supporting actor nomination for the first film in that series, and the dubious one-off award of “best digital acting performanc­e” in 2003, when Gollum faced off against Yoda from Star Wars and Dobby the house elf from Harry Potter. I ask Serkis if motion-capture will ever escape the suspicion that technician­s have a part to play in the final performanc­e.

“I think the perception is changing,” he says. “Really the understand­ing now is that acting is acting, and if you’re doing a performanc­ec aptured role you’re working exactly the same way as if you were playing any kind of liveaction character. You’re working with a director, you’re working opposite other actors whether they be in performanc­e-capture suits and head-mounted cameras or in costume and makeup.”

He continues: “The process in the edit is that (the director) then takes your performanc­e — you are the sole author of the role, crucially, that is the nut of what we’re talking about — and they live with your face in the cut for months and months and months until the visual effects shots finally come in, and the director is trying to emulate exactly what the actor’s performanc­e is doing by translatin­g it to the face of the avatar. Performanc­e-capture acting really is like having digital makeup applied to your face rather than working with a team of makeup artists beforehand. It’s all about the authorship of the role.”

Breathe opens Oct. 20 in Toronto; Oct. 27 in Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary; and across Canada on Nov. 3.

 ?? DENNIS VAN TINE / FUTURE IMAGE / WENN.COM ?? Outside of new producing and directing roles, the multi-faceted Andy Serkis has long been at the centre of a debate over whether motion-capture performanc­es are awards-worthy.
DENNIS VAN TINE / FUTURE IMAGE / WENN.COM Outside of new producing and directing roles, the multi-faceted Andy Serkis has long been at the centre of a debate over whether motion-capture performanc­es are awards-worthy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada