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Title: Q&A: Woody Harrelson Author: Rob Tannenbaum Date: 1st June 2013 Language: en Topics: interview, film, Hollywood, USA Source: Retrieved on 1st June 2013 from https://web.archive.org/web/20130601120653/http://www.details.com/celebrities-entertainment/movies-and-tv/201306/woody-harrelson-game-change-hunger-games-sequel-films
At 51, Woody Harrelson would rather watch Game of Thrones than work
hard. But the longtime hedonist hasn’t lost his hippie spark—just get
him going on those corporate warmongers.
DETAILS: You filmed a lot of your new movie, Now You See Me, in New
Orleans, and you’re here again, making a detective series for HBO with
Matthew McConaughey. Seems like the odds are 80/20 that you two free
spirits will get arrested in this city at some point.
Woody Harrelson: That does seem likely, doesn’t it? I imagine it will be
for multiple charges: Drunk and disorderly would be at the top of the
list, probably, and resisting arrest, no doubt. The good news is, we’re
playing cops, so maybe the New Orleans police will be more forgiving.
DETAILS: You’ve said that playing a cop has made you more sympathetic
toward the police. Did playing Steve Schmidt in Game Change make you
sympathetic to Republicans?
Woody Harrelson: I like Steve Schmidt. But I tend to not like
politicians, because it’s a subtle form of prostitution. Or maybe not so
subtle.
DETAILS: So you dislike Democrats as much as you dislike the GOP?
Woody Harrelson: It’s all synchronized swimming to me. They all kneel
and kiss the ring. Who’s going to take on the oil industry or the
medical industry? People compare Obama to Lyndon Johnson, but I think a
better comparison is between Obama and Nixon. Because Nixon came into
office saying he was going to pull out of Vietnam, and then he escalated
the war. A lot of us were led to believe that Obama was the peace
president, but there are still, I think, 70,000 troops in Afghanistan.
Corporations like Grumman are so powerful that—I don’t know, is this the
kind of shit we want to talk about? It’s making me depressed.
DETAILS: Do you see similarities between Natural Born Killers and the
Hunger Games films? Both look at how TV uses spectacle to keep people
passive.
Woody Harrelson: With Hunger Games, it’s about people rising up to fight
against a corrupt government that controls them.
DETAILS: Now that you’ve wrapped Catching Fire, the Hunger Games sequel,
can you tell us one plot point, something so small the studio won’t
care?
Woody Harrelson: They’re probably going to be pissed about what I
already said. They don’t like you talking about this shit.
DETAILS: Your character, Haymitch, has long blond hair. As a bald guy,
did you feel like keeping the wig?
Woody Harrelson: You know, it feels like the whole conversation is
devolving.
DETAILS: Okay. You were raised in a very religious family. What were
your twenties like, after Cheers made you a star?
Woody Harrelson: It was the time I shook off the yoke of organized
religion and became a hedonist. I won’t paint a sensationalistic picture
for you, but you can imagine. I was famous, I was wealthy. I was an
idiot. An absolute moron. I’ve done it with the best of them, and I’ve
got no—well, I probably have one or two regrets. Honestly, I was lost.
DETAILS: You had a bad temper, too. How is it now?
Woody Harrelson: Pretty good. We don’t get the greatest tools to deal
with anger. It’s like, “Hey, count to 10.” When someone really upsets
me, how do I respond? I don’t usually start counting to 10 and breathing
deeply. But, for example, I don’t think you’ll ever see me get into it
with the paparazzi again.
DETAILS: If you could spend a weekend with any of the characters you’ve
played, who would it be?
Woody Harrelson: Larry Flynt. I love that guy. He’s one of the few
people who’s always 100 percent honest and doesn’t give a shit if he
offends people. I don’t agree with all the porn stuff he publishes, but
I shouldn’t judge. It’s like hanging with Steve Schmidt—I don’t focus on
the politics. With Larry, I don’t focus on the porn.
DETAILS: You’re an advocate for legalizing marijuana. Do you think
recent events make it more likely?
Woody Harrelson: I can’t imagine that it’s going to happen, no. The
deeper issue is, what does it mean to live in a free country? In the
U.S., something like 80 percent of people in prison are there for
“consensual crimes.” The government may change faces from time to time,
but it’s not like we fight wars for democracy—we fight wars for
capitalism and for oil. I keep coming back to the same goddamn subject.
I guess because it’s what really bugs me the most.
DETAILS: Do you want to get more involved in politics?
Woody Harrelson: No. I don’t believe in politics. I’m an anarchist, I
guess you could say. I think people could be just fine looking after
themselves.
DETAILS: You might have a lot of free time on your hands soon, because
you’ve talked about taking a break from acting.
Woody Harrelson: I like the idea of writing and directing my own
projects. But I’m a lazy bastard. [Laughs] I know I could do more, let’s
put it that way. Instead, I just put on Game of Thrones.