Actor gets pumped for role as Spartan king
In 300, Gerard Butler morphs into larger-than-life Leonidas, while a Montreal railway factory morphs into towering Aegean cliffs
JAMIE PORTMAN, CanWest News Service
Published: Saturday, March 03, 2007
There's an extended scene in 300 in which Gerard Butler - massive and fearless in the role of legendary Spartan king Leonidas - slices and dices his way through the invading Persian hordes, laying low 20 of the enemy in the process.
Refusing to let his stunt double take over here, Butler was celebrating his own sense of empowerment, helping re-enact a key moment in one of military history's greatest confrontations - the ancient Battle of Thermopilae, which saw Leonidas and 300 Spartan warriors engage in a fight to the death to defend their homeland against Xerxes and his massive Persian army.
Thanks to the wonders of state-of-the art visual and computer effects and to the latest green-screen techniques, you wouldn't know that this sequence - so evocative of the rugged, towering grandeur of the Aegean cliffs and so redolent of the dust and heat and fury of battle - was actually shot within the sprawling confines of a former railway factory in Montreal. As for Butler, this was the moment when he became genuinely immersed in his character and in both the reality and the mythology of ancient history.
"I've never come across a character quite as powerful and intense and charismatic as this guy - and as bad-ass," the Scottish-born actor says. The Warner Brothers film, which opens Friday, is inspired by Frank Miller's acclaimed graphic novel, and Butler knows that this factor moves Leonidas's heroic story into a contemporary dimension.
Butler, whose last major project was the title role in the film version of Phantom Of The Opera, spent seven months of intense physical training preparing for 300 and the role of Leonidas. He was also guided by the vision of costume designer Michael Wilkinson, who went directly to the Miller graphic novel, which visualized the Spartan soldiers as magnificent physical specimens with capes flung dramatically around their muscular torsos. In the case of Leonidas, Butler knew the king's overwhelming physicality helped define his leadership. He found himself working out before every take and eventually had the sense of being this man.
"Every time I trained, it made me feel more like a Spartan, more like a king, more like I was impressing my men, and more like they would be willing to follow me. ... I literally walked around Montreal with my shoulders back and my chest up."
Butler knew he had to go beyond creating a one-dimensional mythic hero. "He has a lot of things going on. There's an arrogance there, there's a confidence, there's a humour, there's a dryness, there's a compassion, there's a certain amount of humanity."
However, Butler adds, there's even more to Leonidas. "The guy is a nut job. He's crazy and there's a fearlessness that borders on insane. To try and get all those in with a man who really doesn't talk that much was a challenge. And then, to do it all in front of green screen. ..." Butler shakes his head. "As you can see, I'm really not good at talking about it. I just do it."
What keeps coming through is that in shaping the role, Butler went beyond total immersion - whether engaging in hand-to-hand conflict with the enemy or defending the principles of freedom and honour in a dramatic meeting with Brazilian actor Rodrigo Santoro's god-like Xerxes or indulging in a steamy encounter with Lena Headey's sultry queen. He admits that the role became an addiction. "After a certain point, I never felt silly or strange standing in my cape. That started to become one of my strongest allies."
300 will be in theatres Friday.
© The Gazette (Montreal) 2007
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