Transformation is rarely as smooth as the movies
make out. Turning a nerd into a cool cat requires hours in wardrobe, no matter
that any on-screen makeover might take a minute; shifting trucks into giant
robots demands weeks, often months, of pixel-wrangling. And these changes are
wrought behind closed doors: effectuating such transformations while in the
public eye has long proven doubly difficult. Macauley Culkin, Lindsay Lohan, Amanda
Bynes: the child actors who became tabloid fodder are legion. With Shia
LaBeouf, star of two controversial new releases and countless recent off-screen
brouhahas, the passage from teen idol to leading man has been scarcely less
turbulent.
In Berlin this past weekend to promote Nymphomaniac, a two-volume adult odyssey
in which he dons a curious mock-English accent and removes his clothes, LaBeouf
walked out of a press conference after repeating Eric Cantona’s epigram about
sardines and seagulls; at that evening’s premiere, he posed for photographers
with a paper bag inked with the words “I AM NOT FAMOUS ANYMORE” over his head.
Even for someone who’d just worked with Lars von Trier, this was eccentric
behaviour. What brings one of Hollywood’s most bankable stars to start covering
their face, and mouthing the utterances of footballers?
To say LaBeouf has come a long way is an
understatement. Born in 1986, he first came to prominence as the smart-mouthed
hero of the Disney Channel show Even
Stevens; he won a Daytime Emmy in 2003, the year he hit the big screen with
the successful family romp Holes.
Plain-sailing career progression belied off-camera struggles, however.
LaBeouf’s parents – a ballerina and a Vietnam veteran battling dependency
issues – separated early in his childhood. Son took care of father, paying him
to stay clean as his legal guardian on the Even
Stevens set, shuttling him to AA meetings at the close of shooting.
By 2010, after running around in Michael Bay’s Transformers films and the Indiana Jones reboot, LaBeouf was being
heralded by Forbes as the world’s
most bankable star, pipping Daniel Radcliffe and Johnny Depp. Yet, though
successful, the movies, plainly, weren’t great: with maturity came growing
doubts about this easy money, and what to do with himself once he’d ensured his
security, and that of his loved ones, for life. There were drunken brawls,
arrests for loitering, car wrecks both figurative and literal. “The hardest
thing… is dealing with all this idle time,” he confessed in a 2011 Details profile. “That’s when I get into
trouble.”
Reading
LaBeouf’s uncommonly candid interviews, you realise three things. First, that
he must be a nightmare for PRs; second, that he’s funnier and more interesting
in person than the movies have thus far allowed him to be; and thirdly that,
like many performers, he finds echoes of family on set. “My director is my god,
my rock, my mother, my father, my lover, my brother, my enemy,” he blurted in
2012. This can generate its own problems, of course. Relations with Steven
Spielberg, a sometime mentor, cooled after LaBeouf ventured the (not wholly
misinformed) opinion they “dropped the ball” on Indy 4.
With
Bay, matters proved more combative. While filming the third Transformers, LaBeouf was preparing for
a less robotic scene by listening to Feist’s downtempo number “Brandy
Alexander”. A furious Bay ripped out the actor’s headphones and cranked up the Dark Knight score instead. It was a
conflict of diverging sensibilities; the 24-year-old star had outgrown his
46-year-old director. LaBeouf moved on, griping that the studios “give you the
money, then… come to the set and stick a finger up your ass for five
months." Bay has since shot Transformers
4, with the Irish actor Jack Reynor
installed as co-lead.
If there is any real downside to being young,
photogenic and paid $15m on a regular basis, this is it. Hollywood has come to
regard the likes of LaBeouf as disposable freelancers: cheap relative to more
established stars, there to fill space between the explosions the summer audience
really wants to see. (Few went to Transformers
because it was “a Shia LaBeouf movie”.) The actor understood this better than
anybody: “There’s
this coming-of-age thing that’s happening… I have these yearnings to do
different things." Warren Beatty, another performer compelled to prove he
wasn’t just a pretty face, was cited as an inspiration.
Aggressively pushing his boundaries, LaBeouf began
going toe-to-toe with notorious directorial taskmasters and proven acting
heavyweights. He brawled with Tom Hardy while shooting 2011’s Lawless, and clashed with Alec
Baldwin during rehearsals for the Broadway play Orphans. He travelled to Romania and dropped acid, spooking
co-star Rupert Grint, during the filming of this week’s grungy, violent
thriller Charlie Countryman, and
prepared for Nymphomaniac by
stripping in the promo for Sigur Rós’s “Fjögur Píanó”, a delicate episode of physical
theatre almost certainly absent from the Michael Bay playlist.
Writing
and directing his own short, howardcantour.com,
allowed the suddenly over-exposed actor to assert some further creative
control; early Cannes reviews suggested it was a confident debut. Trouble began
when the film emerged online late last year, allowing many to note its direct
and uncredited lifts from Daniel Clowes’ graphic novel Justin M. Damiano. Caught in a Twitter storm, LaBeouf gave
varyingly sincere responses, including the offer of a skywritten apology,
before insisting this wasn’t plagiarism but “performance art” – pleading the
Joaquin Phoenix defence, as it were. (Phoenix enacted a similar meltdown while
filming 2009’s I’m Still Here.)
Whether this is art or merely next-gen Hollywood
acting-up, LaBeouf has committed to it. He’s published an online manifesto
(metamodernism.org), and even touted a performance piece to gallerists, in
which he invited visitors to take a Clowes anthology to his contrite form.
(There are similarities to Marina Abramović’s 1974 piece Rhythm 0.) Look at the Berlin footage, and you’ll see the actor
carefully replicates the dramatic gulp of water Cantona took between phrases
back in 1995; his paper mask’s mantra is one LaBeouf has insistently Tweeted –
thereby repeating himself – since announcing his retirement from public life in
January.
Something’s going on here, and it may be that von
Trier – equally persecuted and prankish, enthusiastic compiler of manifestos –
has replaced Spielberg as LaBeouf’s mentor, and given his charge constructive
ways of filling all that idle time: if not original ideas, exactly, then at
least some knowledge of a world beyond sequels.
(Better to replay others for sport than repeat yourself at the behest of
Hollywood paymasters, perhaps.) Channelling Beckett, point seven of the
Metamodernist manifesto insists “Error breeds sense”. We must wait to see what
emerges once this particular pupal stage is completed, and the paper bag comes
off.
A version of this article ran on today's Telegraph film website. The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman opens in cinemas nationwide on Friday; Nymphomaniac: Volumes 1 and 2 open in selected cinemas on February 22.
Making somewhat opaque self-effacing performance art for kicks is an end to itself. Genius is almost beside the point, because then it'd be feeding into the same hype machine, wouldn't it? I'd say he's taking a piss, and it's surprising that more of the ungodly wealthy don't.
ReplyDeleteIt was the Telegraph who affixed the somewhat contentious word "genius" to the header - personally, I'd agree with you that he's taking the piss on a rather elaborate scale. (And at least he's being funny about it. Though I gather he's subsequently been trumped by Jerry O'Connell, as detailed here:
Deletehttp://www.thewrap.com/jerry-oconnell-trolls-shia-labeouf-setting-art-piece-next-door-iamsorrytoo/
I love the "5pm-ish" on that window.)
It's all a particularly pathetic effort to get away with stealing from a superior artist. No art in it.
ReplyDelete