Academy Award winner Sandra Bullock stars in “The Heat” and
tries on improv comedy for the first time under director Paul Feig.
Photo courtesy of 20th Century Fox |
Bullock stars as Sarah Ashburn, an FBI agent hoping for a promotion and
high-tails it from her home base in New York City to Boston, to help solve the
mystery behind several murders. Standing in Ashburn’s way is a
hard-hitting Boston police officer, Shannon Mullins played by Melissa McCarthy,
who’s not happy that the FBI – especially the stuck-up Ashburn -- is treading
on her turf. Ashburn is determined to wrestle the case away from Mullins,
but the disheveled, foul-mouthed, in-your-face cop is a formidable
adversary. They’ll soon discover they have more in common than they ever
thought possible, including their misfit status and complementary skillsets.
“Ashburn’s effectiveness as an FBI agent comes from her meticulousness,
stubbornness and thoroughness,” says Bullock. “But she’s completely inept
when it comes to any kind of social interaction. She’s trying so hard to
make up for that particular weakness that she becomes insufferably arrogant on
the job. Ashburn is respected but not liked because she isn’t a team
player. Every time she opens her mouth, people cringe.”
The improvisational nature fueled the fun and on- and off-screen bonding. “It
is great working with Melissa,” enthuses Bullock. “She comes through the door
and improv is the way that she does things. Then we had a director who comes
from that world too and nearly everyone in the cast was also from that world.
The world of comedy that I had been familiar with was always very controlled.
There was the script and you had to go through 27 people and the studio before
you could change a line. I always wanted to do this kind of comedy that
we have in THE HEAT (which I have done in real life, sort of free form,) but I
was never really allowed to experience what it was like before on a film.
Walking onto the set of THE HEAT it
took me a couple of days to realize: ‘I’m allowed to do it.’ It was very liberating.
When you are around that, you take it in and you want to improve your game. It
is a muscle that you have to exercise and if you haven’t had much time
exercising that muscle, it gets stale. Watching these people work is exciting
and inspiring, but daunting sometimes too.”
“Melissa has great moves,” says
Bullock,”discussing McCarthy’s comedic skills. “When I saw her dance, I knew we
were going to be fast friends.We did the dancing with no practice whatsoever,”
she continues.
“We said: ‘let’s not rehearse
anything,’ ”interjects her co-star. “Let’s just be as terrible as we’re capable
of being. Poor Paul turns around and we both have our faces taped,” laughs
McCarthy, “and he’s like, ‘What’s happening?’ It was a weird descent into
controlled madness. It was really fun. There was a lot of ruined tape,” she
says. McCarthy adds: “Yeah, I got the moves, but I don’t have the sense to stop
whatever’s going on.”
“We really hit it off, she is like
my sister,’’ adds Bullock. “I’d say it’s rare that actors get together and have
the kind of chemistry and connection we have together. It somehow just works
and it’s something inexplicable that is bigger than what is on the page.”
“The Heat” is distributed by Warner Bros.
No comments:
Post a Comment