The best way to play a free-spirited man who gets under his cousinβs skin is not to prepare at all, says Kieran Culkin.
βYou never quite know whatβs gonna come out of him and I didnβt want to plan that ahead of time,β he says.
In βA Real Pain,β heβs the cousin whoβs untethered, outspoken and, often, a real pain to his more structured relative, played by Jesse Eisenberg. The stance rankles, of course, but thatβs part of their journey. The two are on a trip to Poland where they hope to honor their late grandmother. Unfortunately, the two havenβt been in much contact and live wildly different lives.
Eisenberg, who also wrote and directed the film, is a lot like his character, David. Ditto: Culkin and his Benji.
High anxiety
At one point during filming, Eisenberg came to his co-star and admitted βhe was having a lot of anxiety about me. And I was like, βTrust me. When we get there, Iβll know the words. I can look at it literally on the walk to the set. Iβve read it. Itβs in the back of my brain somewhere. Itβs fine. I got it.β And that gave him more anxiety.β
While Eisenberg considered playing Culkinβs role, he was quickly talked out of it by producer Emma Stone because βheβs so right for David.β
Still, that didnβt ease the directorβs mind. When the two talked about the stress, Eisenberg asked Culkin, βDid you think you and I were going to be alike?β
And Culkin said, βGod no.β And Eisenberg said, βI did.β
βThat was a big one for him,β the βSuccessionβ star says. βHe thought: similar actors, similar age. We talk fast. Same sensibility. Weβll have the same approach. But when his anxieties went through the roof, (mine) didnβt. I got to rely on a great script and just say the words.β
Attention paid
The on-screen friction is making βA Real Painβ an early candidate for awards attention. Culkinβs free-wheeling approach has him in the hunt for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar.
Even though he won an Emmy for the last season of βSuccession,β the 42-year-old father of two wasnβt interested in following up the seriesβ run with a movie. Rest, in fact, was paramount. βA Real Pain,β however, got pushed up and he was quickly on a plane to Poland. He thought about bringing his wife and children on the shoot but βkids being like 1 and 3 wouldβve been a nightmare for all of them,β Culkin says. He faced the work alone and realized, βIt was really, really hard but Iβm very, very, very glad I got to do the movie.β
Because Culkin was familiar with Eisenbergβs work, he was sure heβd be in good hands. βAll I gotta do is take this brilliant writing and just do it with this guy who happens to be a good, competent actor who obviously understands the scenes because he wrote them.β
Eisenberg, he says, turned out to be a fantastic director who was very inclusive. βI knew I had a voice when it came to my character, but he also was willing to hear my opinion about other things. He wants to know what people think β¦. heβs curious. It felt like we were all making this film.β
Just like...
When Culkin got to see the finished product at the Sundance Film Festival, his wife leaned over and said the name of a friend β someone who could have been a reference for Benji. βAnd I went, βYouβre totally right.β That must have been on my mind. I just sort of compartmentalized it and tucked it away somewhere.β
What appealed to the actor was the characterβs spontaneity. "Just when you feel like youβve got a sense of who this guy isβ¦he says something completely different, and it can be read at many different temperatures.β
While Eisenberg thought he might be able to play Benji, Culkin knows he couldnβt have played David. βI couldnβt sit in my skin and feel comfortable as David,β he says. βI donβt think I would watch that movie simply for my performance as David being boring as hell.β
Now, Culkin says, he can see David and Benji as kids. βI know where they came from and how theyβve gotten this way, which says something huge about the writing.β
"A Real Pain" opens throughout the country in November.Β
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