TORONTO - He's one of Hollywood's biggest stars, but Brad Pitt says he
enjoyed taking a smaller role as part of an ensemble in the new film "Babel,"
and was humbled by the work of several nonprofessional actors in the film.
Cast member Brad Pitt
gestures at a news conference for the movie 'Babel' during the 31st
Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto September 10, 2006. The
festival runs from September 7 until September 16.
[Reuters] |
Directed by "21 Grams" director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, "Babel" made its
North American debut at the Toronto International Film Festival this weekend.
An intense tale of four interlocking stories spread across three continents,
the film was a favorite at the Cannes film festival earlier this year and is
generating Oscar buzz.
"Being a part of an ensemble is always more fun, you don't have to carry the
film," Pitt told reporters in Toronto on Sunday, one day after throwing fans
into a frenzy at the red-carpet screening of the film.
"For me, I consider myself more a citizen of the world, and I have great
pride as I sit up here with all the people from different cultures, and know
that we all came together," he said.
Pitt stars alongside Cate Blanchett as a couple on vacation in Morocco when
tragedy strikes. Their story is linked to that of two shepherd boys living in a
remote village, and also to two narratives taking place at the U.S.-Mexican
border near San Diego, and in Japan.
Pitt's and Blanchett's scenes were filmed on location in Morocco, and
Inarritu used several non-actor locals to fill out the cast, which he said was
the most difficult challenge he had faced as a director.
He singled out one scene in which Blanchett's character needs medical
attention, and the only help available is the village veterinarian.
"We were in this room with the veterinarian who stitched up Cate, and he was
the real veterinarian of that town. His hands didn't smell so good, because he
came from some goat surgery," he said.
For Pitt, who during the news conference brushed aside a suggestion he had
become an icon, the experience was humbling.
"How easily they picked it up and understood what they were trying to get
across. ... I was just pretty surprised. It took me down a notch as well," he
said.
HIGH POWER, LOW PROFILE
Pitt has kept a relatively low profile since the birth of his daughter,
Shiloh, with Angelina Jolie in May, and he did not appear in Cannes.
His has been the most sought-after face at a Toronto festival already
boasting considerable star power with the likes of Russell Crowe, Jude Law, Sean
Penn, Penelope Cruz and Jennifer Lopez.
At the news conference on Sunday, the moderator twice chided photographers to
"calm down" so Pitt's answers could be heard over the sound of clicking cameras.
That prompted Pitt to wave his hands and mug for the photographers.
"That's the picture that's going to end up when I have breakdown or something
... if I get arrested for a DUI (drunken driving charge) later on, make racial
slurs or something," he joked.
Inarritu said he considered the film at its core to be about parents and
children, a theme that resonated with Pitt.
"It becomes the one thing that keeps you up at night, how can you protect
your children? It's less about yourself, and it's more about the kids," he said.
Pitt added fatherhood would definitely influence roles he accepts in the
future.
"I'll try to be a little bit more mature about my decisions, but this one
I'll be proud for them to see, once they're old enough to really understand it."
"Babel" is scheduled for limited release in October.