Ben Stiller - DodgeBall
Stiller Dodges a Ball and Comes Up Smiling.
Ben Stiller/Dodgeball Interview by Paul Fischer in Los Angeles.
It would be an understatement to say that this is quite the busy year for
Ben Stiller. So far, we've talked to him about Along Came Polly and Starsky
and Hutch, and later in the year are Envy and Meet the Fockers. But if
Stiller feels overexposed in any way, he is not prepared to admit it. "We
want to get Fockers in by the end of this year so that I can have five
movies come out this year, so we're hoping," laughs Stiller. He does seem
somewhat concerned that by year's end the public may have grown tired of
seeing a Ben Stiller film. "That would be horrible, yes, Jesus. Why didn't I
think of that? Unfortunately, I can't control when they release the movies.
I've done these movies over the last couple of years and you just do what
you find funny. Hopefully, people will come if they want to come. But I have
an awareness of not wanting to do too much, but I have to just go with my
gut of what I think is worth doing."
One such film that he found funny was Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story, by a
first-time writer/director, in which Stiller shines as an over-obsessive
fitness guru who owns a major gym, determined to take over a struggling
competitor, owned by Vince Vaughan. Easily the most comically unsympathetic
character in Stiller's recent arsenal, the actor laughs when asked if there
are any parallels between actor and character. "I mean, look, they're all
elements of yourself somewhere." He differentiates his White Goodman
character from its recent predecessors, he says laughingly, "by starting
with the moustache and then going to the wig and skin colour. He had this
kind of tone of orange that doesn't really exist in nature, that fake sort
of skin, that tan machine, tan lotion thing. It's just trying to somehow
connect with some sort of ridiculous, self-made kind of fitness guru thing
that I think exists out there." Stiller says that the character isn't based
on any one particular person. "There are people and elements over the years,
from which I borrowed, including characters on The Ben Stiller Show sketch
show, where we did a Tony Robbins take off, or that fitness guy Tony Little.
I just tried to come up with something that feels like what the character
is, based on what [writer/director] Rawson wrote."
For those unfamiliar with this distinctively American childhood game,
Dodgeball involves throwing balls at your opponents and essentially hitting
you. It is an aggressive, fast and wild sport, one which Stiller DID play as
a kid, and, as exemplified in the movie, was one of the more aggressive
participants in the sport. "I had a lot of anger and rage, but I was not
very physically daunting, so I think that worked for me. But I was an
awkward sort of adolescent and not as coordinated as I wanted to be. I was
not the worst but I definitely wasn't the best, so I was probably closer to
the backend of the middle."
It was Stiller's sense of awkwardness that may have led him, on a
subconscious level, to the world of comedy. "I think comedy comes, on some
level, from having a sense of humour about life and seeing life in a way
where you have to have some sort of perspective on it. People that don't
have any sort of insecurities, I think, tend to be less funny. I think
humour somewhat comes from the fact that you can see how ridiculous
everything is and how we're all sort of just trying. I know I find those
people funnier to me, those who can see the ridiculousness in life.
Confident people seem to be less funny and seem to have less irony about
them."
It was fortunate that Stiller not only came from a family steeped in comic
tradition, but also married a beautiful and sparkling comedienne in
Christine Taylor who also happens to play his nemesis in Dodgeball. Stiller
laughingly admits that she wasn't as repulsed by his character as he thought
she may have been. "She wasn't really repulsed by it, at least that's what
she told me, almost turned on in a way," confesses Stiller. "It was
interesting because we got to sort of have fun on this film and somehow she
thought it was funny, like this character. We were laughing a lot, and got
to spend time together, which was good. When you're working, you don't get
to do that and we just connect on that level, where we laugh at the same
things, which was really fun and therapeutic. It's always good to throw
balls at each other and good couples therapy," Stiller smilingly adds. But
if you are throwing balls at the wife, hitting her in the process is not
exactly a good idea. "I hit her in the face a couple times, which was
neither good nor helpful. That actually affected our relationship for like a
week, because there's just no way not to get upset with somebody after
you've done that. It just sent us both back to eighth grade."
The couple has a two-year daughter who occasionally accompanies her parents
to work, but Dodgeball was not the easiest set for a then one and a half
year old. "She came a number of times, but when we were doing this movie, it
was definitely not the best place for her to be, so she'd look at dad in his
weird wig."
Stiller is still at work on Meet the Fockers, in which Oscar-winning legends
Barbra Streisand and Dustin Hoffman play his parents to DeNiro's somewhat
scary in-law. He says he is having a blast working on this film, with that
particular cast. "It's one of those things where you go to work everyday and
go: 'This is just unreal.' Yet, you get to a point, and luckily kind of
quickly, where everybody feels comfortable with each other, which you have
to have to make it work. But, I'm sitting there doing scenes with Barbra
Streisand going: 'I'm doing scenes with Barbra Streisand who hasn't been in
a movie in eight years.' She's so funny yet so iconic and it's exciting."
Streisand gets to play the quintessential Jewish mother in the film, but
with a twist. "She's like the Earthy, cool, sex therapist for seniors, which
is what she does in the movie. So she lets it all hang out and just looks
great. She's got this dark, curly wig, reminding me of a lot of moms from
the upper west side in the 70's that I grew up with."
After having seen a lot of Stiller this year, the actor hopes to finally
take a breather. "I am going to take a break for a while, let everyone chill
out for a little bit, myself included." Then he hopes to diversify and maybe
return to drama. "I hope so, if people allow me to. Well actually and then
kind of figure out what I'm doing. But I mean, my hope is to always be able
to do different things."
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