都這樣 =.=
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How Ewan is staying the pace
26 June 2006
Trainspotting and Star Wars actor Ewan McGregor found himself in the
psychiatrist's chair thanks to the thriller Stay. He plays a shrink in the
movie from Finding Neverland and Monster's Ball director Marc Forster, so he
researched by meeting a couple of psychiatrists - a man and a woman - in New
York, where the action takes place.
He found his foray into their world a fascinating one. "It's very interesting
anyway, but seeing it from their point of view is really interesting," he
says.
"The idea if you see a therapist or a psychiatrist is it's very much about
you. You don't really think about it from their point of view, nor should you
actually.
"But when it was my job to think about it from that point of view, it was
quite interesting to see that. Both of them have said this, that many
psychiatrists have problems themselves, have issues themselves and that's why
they're in this.
"They get into it because they feel the need to help lots of people. And
why's that? Because they need a lot of help themselves."
Stay is being released on DVD in the uncut version, billed as "the version
they wouldn't let you see at cinemas".
In fact, very few people saw it on its limited release. Stay is one of those
films that, despite a decent cast and director, remained on the distributor's
shelf and then, when finally released, only shown in a handful of cinemas.
McGregor admits it was a weird film to make, partly because he'd never made a
film in New York City before. The schedule involved much night shooting which
added to the oddness.
"That always immediately makes the experience very weird because you're
sleeping during the day. Can you imagine trying to sleep during the day,
especially in New York? My curtains, my windows were all blacked off for
weeks. Then trying to sleep during the day with the noise of New York."
Another difficulty were the shooting conditions themselves. Rather than block
off areas for exclusive use by film-makers, they were filming on the streets
among the public.
"Usually in a film you'd move into a street and the ends are blocked off,
it's just us in the middle, we take over. But in New York, you're filming
among the city and its people, and they don't get out of the way. And you
say, 'sorry, we're filming' and they're like, 'eff off'. So you're just stuck
in the middle of it.
"It's a weird thing and then, of course, it's a very bizarre story and Marc
was quite experimental in many ways, so it was weird, brilliant."
McGregor's screen shrink stands in for a colleague, taking over the case of a
troubled young man (Ryan Gosling) who announces that he intends to commit
suicide at midnight on Saturday.
Naomi Watts, the beauty menaced by the beast in the recent King Kong remake,
co-stars as the psychiatrist's girlfriend and former patient.
"The film is basically about my struggle to stop him and his struggle to do
it," says McGregor.
"I start breaking the rules of psychiatry by trying to find him outside of
the office and stop him.
"It becomes very important to me to save his life and, while I'm doing that,
my reality starts to crack and things spiral kind of out of control for my
character."
He hopes the unusualness of the thriller won't deter audiences.
"I think it's a satisfying movie because it unravels in front of your eyes,
you have to do a bit of work yourself," says McGregor.
"It's a clever film and I think Marc tried to fool an American studio into
making an experimental movie, which is kind of what he's done - and he's done
it very well," he says.
* Stay is released to buy and rent on DVD from Twentieth Century Fox Home
Entertainment on July 3.
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