Dec
10
Submitted by admin on December 10, 2008 - 9:37am

Rolling Stone out Friday, features Brad Pitt on the Cover. Below are some highlights:
Whats his favorite Angelina Jolie film? Their 2005 action flick Mr. & Mrs. Smith.
Why? "Because you know ... six kids," he says. "Because I fell in love."
He says his new fantasy drama The Curious Case of Benjamin Button got him thinking about his own mortality. "Angie and I do not fight anymore," he says. "What occurred to me on this film, and also with the passing of her mother [actress Marcheline Bertrand in 2007], is that there's going to come a time when I'm not going to get to be with this person anymore. I'm not going to get to be with my children anymore. Or friends, people I love and respect. And so, if we have a flare-up, it evaporates now."
Benjamin Button is your third film with Fincher. Going back to Fight Club, though, I found a quote where he talks about how you're actually sort of similar to your character, Tyler Durden.
In that I don't bathe?
He didn't mention that specifically. He said, "It's probably a character closer to Brad in real life than most people would be comfortable knowing." [Pitt laughs] "There is a childlike sense of anarchy....He is kind of a shit-stirrer and one of those people who is 'Huh? Is that the current thinking? I don't really buy that.'" Well, that probably comes from growing up in a religious community. I just found it so stifling, my religion. I know it's very comforting for other people.
Did you go to church every Sunday? Yeah. And it was too much of what you shouldn't be doing instead of what you could be doing. I get enraged when people start telling other people how to live their lives. It drives me mental. This Prop. 8 thing just drives me mental.
Where were you on election night? Chicago. I went down to Grant Park, because I was doing Oprah the next day. I walked home from the park to the hotel, which was a half-hour walk. And I could walk freely — no one was interested in me at that point. People were weeping and hugging. The sense of elation in the streets — it was great. That was such a turnaround for us. We captured the original definition of America again.
Do you think Fight Club could have been made after September 11th? No. Certainly not that ending. We debated it then. There's a line we stuck in, about the buildings being evacuated.
Some critics just didn't get that film. Did you see the DVD that Fincher put out? He put all the negative reviews in the booklet. Some London critic said, "Not only is it anti-capitalistic, but it's anti-society and anti-God." We were like, "We didn't realize it was that good!"
Benjamin Button and Fight Club actually deal with similar themes: having a finite amount of time in life, and what we should do with it. But they come to such radically different conclusions. In Fight Club, the response to mortality is nihilism, anarchy — [Laughs] That was a Nineties conclusion. Now we have an Aughts conclusion. I actually never thought of what you just said. But it's probably true.
It's just, Benjamin Button feels very positive, but you could easily come away from that story feeling very bleak. Yeah, I think it's open to . . . it's your choice. I findBenjamin is about those universal things we all share — that 95 percent that makes us all the same, wherever we are in the world. Our loves, our hopes, but also the loss that we all walk around with and hide very well, and the ultimate notion that we're all expendable. To me, it's a counterstatement to this divisive period we've been in, where we focused on the two, three, four, five percent of ways in which we're different.
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