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Hitman On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown
Writer/Director Richard Shepard Talks About
The Matador
By Rich Drees
It sounds like the set up to a Borscht Belt comedian’s routine. “A
hitman and a traveling businessman walk into a bar…”
And while there are some darkly comic moments in writer/director
Richard Shepard’s The Matador – in which traveling salesman
Danny Wright (Greg Kinnear) encounters aging, freelance assassin
Julian Noble (Pierce Brosnan) in a Mexico City hotel bar – the film
is more concerned with its characters’ flaws and allowing those
flaws to drive the humor in any of the situations the characters may
find themselves in.
“This movie is called The Matador because matador means
‘killer,’” explains Shepard to a preview audience in Philadelphia.
“There’s, obviously, the metaphor to bullfighting. Bullfighting, by
its very nature is a dying spectacle and Pierce’s character is sort
of dying, not physically, but emotionally.”
In The Matador, Kinear's traveling businessman befriends
Brosnan's emotionally unstable contract killer while on a trip to
Mexico. There friendship is brief, but isn't ended by Julian's
admission to Danny, "I facilitate fatalities." Instead, Julian tells
Danny he now has the best cocktail party story ever. Several months
pass and Julian suddenly finds himself in lethal trouble with his
employers and in need of a friend, so he turns to the only person he
has been able to call friend in the last three decades of his life-
Danny.
Shepard, who already had the 1991 cult comedy The Linguini
Incident and a few direct-to-cable films on his resume,
originally intended to shoot The Matador in Mexico
independently on a budget of a quarter-of-a-million dollars.
However, when he heard that Brosnan’s production company was looking
for writers for a sequel to his 200- thriller The Thomas Crown
Affair, Shepard sent a copy of the Matador screenplay in
as a sample of his writing. While he was hoping to get a meeting
with Brosnan and his producing partner to pitch his own ideas for a
Thomas Crown sequel, Shepard got a rather different phone
call from Brosnan.
“The phone rang and it was Pierce on the other end and he said,
‘I’ve read your script and it was quite disturbing and funny and I
would like to star in it,’” states Shepard. With that phone call,
what plans Shepard had for a small independent production promptly
changed. “Suddenly we were making a much larger film. But to
Pierce’s credit, the script that I had written is to script you see
in the movie.”
Unlike a certain other “licensed-to-kill” character that Brosnan has
played in the past, The Matador allows Bronson to explore
what kind of effect that life can have on someone.
“I wanted you to know that he was brutal in his killing, but I
didn’t really care about the machinations of it,” Shepard explains.
“There are other movies that do those things better. To me, the
movie is about his breakdown on the stairs at the racetrack, not
going up on the roof to see them do something.
“I didn’t have the money or time anyway,” he adds with a chuckle,
“but I’ll take it as an artistic decision over an economic one.”
With Brosnan on board, Shepard’s next step was casting actors in the
roles of the business man who befriends the assassin on the verge of
a nervous breakdown and his wife.
“In a movie that doesn’t have car chases, it’s really all about
performance,” Shepard states. “When we were suddenly making a real
movie, I wrote on a piece of paper ‘Hope Davis’ and ‘Greg Kinnear.’”
And in a rare bit of Hollywood luck, Shepard was able to secure his
initial picks for the roles.
“To be able to get your first choices really never happens,”
enthuses Shepard. “I think Greg is so funny and he’s got a warmth to
him and comic sensibility. Hope is like a thief. She comes in and
steals every line. But by putting these two great actors opposite
Pierce, it sort of said to him ‘You better come ready to play and
not take this lightly because they’ll just whip you off the
screen.’”
“About three or four weeks before we shot Pierce had a crisis of
confidence, and was like ‘I don’t know if I can do this,’” Shepard
recalls. “That was a very long weekend. But he came to his senses
and once he did, he fully went for it.”
Brosnan’s new found confidence was the source for an improvised
sequence that would go on to be prominently featured in the film’s
advertising campaign.
“We were we shooting at the hotel and the lobby was so great and we
weren’t using it. So I said to Pierce, ‘Do you have any interest in
walking through the lobby in your underwear?’ and he said ‘Well can
I wear my boots?’ There were five extras in that scene and all the
people in the deep background were people checking into the hotel.
We did it in one take.” |