The Tao of Callum Keith Rennie
by Cynthia Amsden, Take One Magazine, February, 2002
Here are the ingredients. Sunday afternoon at the Four Seasons Hotel
in Beverly Hills and the Santa Ana winds have eased to a tolerable
breeze. Tuna and rice in a seaweed wrap that looks like the AGO's chief,
Jamie Kennedy, should have made it. A large serving dish of calamari and
Callum Keith Rennie - luxury, success, food and talent.
Now let's add
some elements to give this some integrity for anyone who knows Mr. Rennie, or
any journalist who's interviewed him, or any director who has or might want
to cast him. His new truck, a brushed-silver Ford Lightning, is in valet
parking. He's wearing an El Camino T-shirt with khakis and sandals. He's
sporting a pale-blue baseball hat with the name of a South Carolina golf
course on it. He is not toeing the Gucci line of studied casual. No feigned,
oops!, I accidentally wore my Ferragamo belt. He's at ease. And he could give
a rat's ass that the staff are comforting their bruised sensibilities by
doing their compensatory rationalization that his is rebel
attire.
Rennie appears to have outgrown his rebel phase; or maybe he has
just outlasted it because in its truest form, a rebel goes out in flames -
and Rennie is still here. The bad-boy gambit was a good marketing ploy in
the early days of his career. Hard Core Logo locked in that image, aided by
his chain-smoking interviews, slouching demeanour and answers salted with
bits of anarchy and vulgarity. It's difficult to determine if he presented
that image deliberately or just conveniently adopted it from journalists
who seized the first, easy angle. Either way, it's amazing just how
much mileage he got out of a two-day growth of beard and a good
photographer.
It's easy to forget that Rennie has only been in the
business for eight years, which is a more recent entry than his peers. Paul
Gross started in 1985 and Don McKellar made his 1989 debut in Roadkill. In
that time Rennie has traversed the equivalent of a full-media arch, starting
with headlines like "late bloomer," "moody Edmonton-born (sic) actor poised
for the big time," "�has the rugged cool of a bad boy," "man of passion,"
plus enough other-actor references to make anyone question the integrity of
their own identity: "hipper than James Dean," "the most charismatic young
actor to appear since the debut of Gary Oldman," and "Canada's answer to Brad
Pitt." From a journalistic standpoint, he is on the verge of being labelled
as "mature�" and it's inevitable some writer is going to get wind of his
new, and highly conservative, passion, golf, and use it as proof.
But
his image is something Rennie seems to be actively toying with, instead of
catering to what has been attributed to him. His character of Gary Jensen in
Lynne Stopkewich's Suspicious River strays into something new - malevolence.
Blithely referred to as a Canadian Belle du jour, this film is based on Laura
Kasischke's novel about Leila Murray (Molly Parker), a lonely motel
receptionist who allows her submissive nature to be sexually exploited by
guests in an effort to find some measure of control in her life. She meets
Jensen (Rennie), a stranger who at first protects her and then seduces her
into participating in her own destruction. The difference between the two
films is that the resolution in Belle du jour is limited to plot strategy,
while in Stopkewich's film there is emotional closure as well.
In
Suspicious River, Rennie is almost unrecognizable when he first appears on
screen. He has bulked up, losing the whimsical degenerate silhouette that was
part of his cachet. Yet, in his character there is something that speaks both
to and from the actor, almost a domestic familiarity with the wasteland that
is Jensen. "There's a clich�d form in playing the bad guy, a Hollywood-type
of bad guy," says Rennie. "It's a very hard thing to break away from. Lynne's
film is so realistic and she keeps it at a low hum, like a monotonous
sickness, that Jensen couldn't be a character that pops or is telegraphed in
anyway that is obvious. Most people who are bad are slow to show their form.
He believes he isn't wrong - the joyous Gary Jensen."
"I forced Callum to
cram himself into an extremely tight pair of jeans for this movie," Lynne
Stopkewich laughs. "I've wanted to work with him ever since I saw him in
Mina's Double Happiness. I wanted to be the director to really push him, to
be the one who was going to give him something he could really sink his teeth
into and do something phenomenal. And I have to say I think his performance
in Suspicious River is the finest I've ever seen from him. I drove him crazy,
but he was incredibly generous. He just said to me, 'Make me your meat
puppet.'"Languid malignancy - a character tumour played out, dominating
its host - Rennie dials evil down to a murmur in Suspicious River. No faux
elegance, no glib intellectualizing, nothing to distract from the
complete ordinariness of the personality. It's an interesting technique,
which he employs again, but differently, in Bruce McDonald's Picture Claire.
In the pawnshop scene, Rennie's character, a hired thug specializing in
"wet work," needs information from the owner. In the motion of leaning over
the counter - leaning in, asking a question - he manifests a disturbing
quiet. "I just added little bits. There's a promise of
nastiness."
"Elegance is refusal," was the proclamation from Diana
Vreeland, the 20th-century arbiter of style. "Less is more," wrote the
architect Mies van der Rohe. Rennie profits from these philosophies. Star
vehicles are not his ambition. As in the rules of composition in fine art,
the focus of attention should never be front and centre. Offside is the
fertile ground. His characters are in the next room or outside waiting in a
car. He doesn't steal films; he causes the camera to turn in his direction.
He induces the audience to attend when he is on screen.
Rennie's
history is well known, if only because of excessive press repetition and how
easily it fits the phoenix-rising-out-of-the-ashes allegory. Canada - being
the country where acceptable standards of living are the norm - doesn't offer
many hard-luck stories, and Jim Carrey has cornered that market. Rennie's
story has a higher punk quotient. Born in 1960, in Sunderland, U.K., he moved
with his parents to Edmonton at the age four, growing up to become a restless
youth of no account, substance abuse leading to a bar-fight epiphany, and
then a haphazard acting career that led to Mike Hoolboom's 1994 short,
Frank's Cock. Roughly calculated, Suspicious River, shot in 1999 and released
in 2001, is Rennie's 39th film.
As a proverbial hot property, Rennie
sprinted through the Canadian pantheon of directors. Hoolboom led to Mina
Shum (Double Happiness, 1995), who led to John L'Ecuyer (Curtis's Charm,
1996), then Bruce McDonald (Hard Core Logo, 1996), Kari Skogland (Men with
Guns, 1997), Don McKellar (Last Night, 1998), David Cronenberg (eXistenZ,
1999), back to McDonald (Picture Claire, 2001) and then Stopkewich.
Television called to him as well, beginning with X-Files, two rounds of
Twitch City and the last two seasons on Due South, where he replaced David
Marciano as the cop half of the Paul Gross equation. Rennie did well with the
routine of a series. The timing was right. The schedule was right. The pay
was very right and the players were right. It was lovely while it lasted, but
in this country, it has to be safe television comedy if it's going to
seriously last.
The culmination of all this work has produced an actor
with indie appeal - a testosterone Parker Posey. Not an actor/director. Not
a writer/director/actor/producer. Just an actor. Alphabits and omega.
Add words - but not too many - and stir him up. "The less lines, the
better," he says. "I am the silent film actor, but not in a slapstick sort of
way. Film is an image-based medium, so whatever you can say without the words
is far more provocative and punctuating. If the lines are not funny or if
they don't advance the story, sometimes it's hard. I hate talk in
movies." Partially because of this, Rennie has not been characterized as
mall- movie fodder in spite of his staunch cineaste following and lots of
gaga, Web-page disciples. The former includes Christopher Nolan, the director
of Memento (2001), who cast Rennie as the guy in the closet, which
modified his art-house status and upped his market value. But extracting that
kind of information is difficult. Self-puffery is not his trademark. One can
ask all the set-up questions, but Rennie tactically
digresses.
Flashback to Toronto, June 1997. The place is the Express Caf�
on Queen Street West. The first season of Due South has just wrapped and
half-a-year would pass by before the first six half-hours of Twitch City
would go to air. Rennie explains, "I want to work in the best arena possible
[meaning L.A.] but, at the same time, I come from Canada and I want to work
here because I choose to, not because it's a consolation prize. I want to
be able to make a Canadian film every year."
Present day Los Angeles,
October 2001. The L.A. experiment is over. He's packing his gear and moving
back north. A latter-day Diogenes, "It's the end of this part of the
adventure," Rennie explains. "Now there will be a different plan. I don't
think I will have a permanent residence unless I buy a place. I'll come back
down here to do missions, covert operations, and then get out with everything
still intact. Up until now, I've had bivouac spots, but no base
camp.
"I prefer living the life I want to live and I can do that far
easier in Canada than down here. I've never participated in L.A. the way one
is supposed to as an actor." He laughs at memories he has no intention
of sharing. "They want a certain dance here and I have two left feet. Here
you have to be two things at the same time: socially affable and a good
actor. I am a questionable actor and socially inept. Up north, the dance
feels different. The music is different. Maybe there's something in the
air. Maybe there's more melancholy here, more desperation. I do
believe different places make you focus differently. They make you
create differently. I focus better in my truck."
Indeed, better in his
truck, with his dog, heading north. "In Vancouver, I have a history that's
successful in my personal life, and that leaks into my work. The more people
I add to my life, the more I get confused." In Vancouver he also has his
long-time manager, Elizabeth Hodgson, a nurturing yet obsidian-witted woman
whose faith in her actor's talent is as pure as instinct. It was Hodgson who
sat beside Rennie at the 1999 Genies. For a brief, shining moment, the
dishevelled but shrewd actor was replaced by a polished but flustered man
climbing the steps to receive his Genie for Best Supporting Actor in Last
Night. This was not his first acceptance speech - he won a 1997 Gemini for
Best Performance in a Children's or Youth Program or Series for My Life As a
Dog, and a Vancouver Film Festival Leo for Best Actor in Suspicious River -
but it was a heartfelt one.
The subject of acting, which can send people
like Brad Pitt into a mystic spin, does not intimidate Rennie. He doesn't go
into long prosaic descriptions of his craft, but on the other hand, he
thankfully doesn't invoke the Muses. "It's never been a matter of roles. It's
an experience. It's very hard to say, 'Oh that part would be good for me.' I
used to see roles as whatever came around the corner and if I was available
to do them, but now I can actually see what it is that I want to express at
different times." As of late, life has been a matter of moving from set to
set. A year ago, he finished his role as a detective in Torso: The Evelyn
Dick Story, the CTV production about one of Canada's most lurid and
infamous murder cases. It was supposed to air on September 11th, and a new
date has yet to be announced. Travelling from Toronto to the Prairies, he
shot the made-for-television movie Trapped with fellow Vancouver actors
Martin Cummins and Ian Tracey, and then Bob Clark's Now & Forever with
Adam Beach and Mia Kirshner. After that, he finished the trip west by working
on Slapshot II: Breaking the Ice with Steven Baldwin, and he is about to
begin production on Flower & Garnet, the first feature by Keith Behrman,
who directed the Canadian Film Centre short Ernest. "I'm so excited about
that one I can't stand it," Rennie says with unbridled
enthusiasm.
"Acting is about my own landscape and the landscape of the
world I get to participate in. I have to appreciate it. There's that
Stanislavsky thing of loving the art in yourself, not yourself in the art, or
the trappings of it, or the carrot dangled in front of you. That can really
make it into something it's not. You start out with wanting to tell the
truth. Then it gets diverted and all of a sudden you want a bigger trailer to
tell the truth in," he pauses for effect, but not so long that it's
theatrical. "It becomes demented. It erodes. Like how big a studio do you
need to paint in? How vast a landscape do you need to see? It's the same with
this type of work. Acting is really grassroots. It comes from
inside."
When all is said and done - and it never is around Rennie -
there is always his new passion - golf. This pastime-turned-religion could
potentially inflict enormous damage on his maverick image. Or perhaps not.
"If you're an actor and you talk about golf in an interview, you come off
sounding like a total fucking asshole," he explains as the calamari is
whisked away and fresh coffee is poured. "You might as well say, 'I'm
lounging around on a yacht.' Readers are seeing you in a golf cart with
drinks in your hand. They're not seeing a hardcore, bag-carrying, no
food, humping-around-the-course golfer. Maybe I'll shoot 36 holes a day or
maybe I'll spend the entire day out in the hot sun of North Carolina where no
one else is playing because it's way too painful."
The Tao of golf
harmonizes nicely with the Tao of acting for Rennie. The introspection. The
inner truth. The dialogue with self. "All I ever do in my mind is set up for
a good thing. Let's use a golf analogy. I go to the range, I hit balls. The
range is a bit different, like reading a scene in your apartment or hotel
room. At the range, you are not hitting off the grass, you are hitting off a
plastic mat. In the hotel room, you're by yourself. You're not really acting;
you're working out stuff. Like on the range, you're working out stuff. When
you get on the course or on the set, it's another world. All you can do is be
prepared enough to let it all go, then stuff starts happening and hopefully,
there is something good there. A good director guides that. Lynne is very
good at that. So is Bruce. An actor needs a witness for the good and the
bad."