One of Hollywoods most popular actors among his peers, Damons career was launched by the unruly genius Will Hunting, the eponymous hero of a film that earned Damon a nomination as an actor and saw him and Ben Affleck scoop the 1996 Oscar® for Best Original Screenplay. Damon's trajectory has continued to soar. He was excellent as a fidgety, emaciated solider in Ed Zwick's Courage Under Fire, starred in Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan and, in 1999, conjured a memorable performance as the creepy killer Tom Ripley. He has established himself among the Hollywood A-list with his pair of Ocean's and Bourne films, and has made a series of fine personal choices, from Stephen Gaghan's Syriana, Scorsese's The Departed and now this month's The Good Shepherd, each film benefiting from Damon's ability to project both a warm affability and a withdrawn sourness.
Q. Its back to the beginning for you without the CIA thered be no Jason Bourne.
MD: Thats true its been an agency thats provided me with great career opportunities!Q. The film suggests that the film was born from this elitist society.
MD: Well it was. The people who were there at the beginning did come out of this set, Skull & Bones, and this is all based on fact. Its a very well documented time and there have been countless biographies written about the men who were there at the beginning. Theres a lot of information available so we wanted to be accurate in terms of representing how things actually were.Q. Your characters a composite based mainly on James Angleton, right?
MD: Yeah, we didnt want to come out and have it be Angleton because then youre making a biopic which is something entirely different and wasnt what we wanted to do. He was partly a model for the character though.Q. Looking at some of your recent roles, if theyre looking for a serious SOB with no sense of humor, do they always come to you?
MD: Well hopefully not in real life. Hopefully I am a little more fun that Edward. But in terms of this role, thats what was required. And that was the great thing for me doing this with De Niro. All through shooting he was sitting as close to me as you are now, just off camera, watching every detail of the performance and helping me, urging me to go one way or another in a scene. He was very hands-on, and a very particular, detail-orientated director. So that was great for me.
Was it unusual for you to be as understated and unemotional as your character?
MD: It is unusual to be given permission to do that. Most films and directors lose their nerve and want to indicate a bit more, to show that their story is clear. Im not saying thats a good thing; as an actor its anathema to good acting, but to have someone with the confidence to say that should I be utterly natural and minimalist was great, because thats what these characters are. To broadcast their feelings is putting them in danger,potentially, so they would mask their emotions.
Q. Did you find yourself taking on De Niro-isms?
MD: No, hes so unique, youd be accused of imitating him!
Q. As a new father, are you more aware of the sacrifices these guys make in terms of their family?
MD: Most definitely, and the price that the job exacts. We did lots of research and met some family members of some of the original guys in the CIA and its a shared sacrifice. The family sacrificed too. The agents are very busy, dont come back much, and thats a burden borne by the family as well.
Q. Now theres a stigma attached to the CIA. Do you think thats warranted?
MD: Well, its confusing, because its always changing. The rules have changed in the last few years, too. I think its something that the citizenry needs to be vigilant about participating in democracy, and that includes issues like whats going on now, and how much secrecy and transparency there should be. Thats an on-going thing in a democracy you want checks and balances and oversight, but you need a covert agency to protect the country. Its a very tricky balance and I think it changes as the world changes and I think we all need to be mindful of that.
Q. The world changed with 9/11. Do you think the agency has a G-d complex?
MD: I think it did at this time. Obviously, going into the Bay of Pigs, these guys must have thought they were invincible. Theyd come up through OSS, theyd won the Second World War, had great success in Iran in 53 and Guatemala in 54. They must have felt on top of the world. Now, I think theyve taken some hits since then and maybe the G-d complex isnt what it was here, like in the scene where Richard Hayes says Why dont you put a The in front of the CIA? Because you dont put The in front of G-d. I think that probably is a true representation of time, although not of the situation now.
Q. In the film, people like your character were held as idealists and true patriots. When did idealism get such a bad name?
MD: Well its a fine line. People do things in the names of good, and in the name of ideals, but the world isnt that simple. So they end up doing things that arent necessarily good. Even if they think theyre doing the right thing, but when viewed from a different perspective they can look barbaric and crazy. I think in terms of playing the role, my job was to understand why he did everything that he did. And that was no problem the script was well constructed, and even though he does some unseemly things theres a reason why he does them. And theres a rationale to why hes doing them.
Q. Youve know Angelina for a few years and youve become closer more recently. Did that help at all?
MD: It was interesting because shes so unlike the character that she plays. I cant imagine Angelina suffering in a relationship where shes not happy. Shes very independent and very strong and yet she plays a woman very much of that time, who would live that quiet life of silent suffering for the sake of her son. I was joking with her that whatever her instinct was shed do the opposite thing, and thats how shed find the character. But its a testament to her skill as an actor that shes so good at playing someone whos so different from her.
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