Movieline Magazine -
1997
The Mystery of Christian Bale by Michael Atkinson
At
13, he starred brilliantly in Spielberg's 'Empire of the Sun', which
was a box-office disappointment. At 18, he starred in the musical ''Newsies'',
which bombed. How is it that Christian Bale, with only small
performances in ''Little Women'' and 'The Portrait of a Lady' to
recommend him, stands poised at 23 on the edge of what odds say will
be a long, impressive screen career?
Ten
years after the fact, Hollywood and most filmgoers have still not
caught up with the blistering, mysterious experience of Steven
Spielberg's 'Empire of the Sun'. An unreal-but-true chronicle of a
British boy imprisoned in China during World War II, the film has
moments of ascension and naked grandeur that are unlike any other in
American movies. At it's shuddery heart burns the complex, unnerving
presence of Christian Bale. All of 13 at the time, and dominating
nearly every frame. As Bale's character, Jim, gets separated from
his parents in a heaving Chinese mob, or stares off at the distant
Hiroshima explosion and makes it for a dead woman's soul rising to
heaven, it's obvious we're not talking about another mere
coming-of-age tale starring another proficient kid thespian. Bale's
performance is without question one of the best ever given by a
child on film. All the same, Empire and Bale were largely overlooked
when the film was released and so today it may seem that Bale, if
you notice him at all, is slowly, craftily emerging from next to
nowhere.
Bale's
Hollywood saga is unique, a subtly managed trek around career
potholes, up astonishingly steep acting challenges and neatly over
the barbed hurdle of puberty, all transpiring more or less outside
the godlike eye of publicity, gossip and personality hype. His
career and public profile could be an object lesson for his
contemporaries, many of whom have already skidded out or gone
squirrelly. Bale has survived with his sanity, privacy and gift
intact. He has never been the subject of a publicity campaign, and
even in the current Era of Hype, where unknowns vie for magazine
covers, he keeps a low profile. Hence, his name might not fluster
your chimes like "Leonardo Dicaprio" does, but he occupies
the same high ground, and stands poised on the verge of one of the
most promising adult careers of his generation.
That
Bale has never quite gotten his due for 'Empire' may have been his
divine good fortune: if the Spielberg film had been a hit, what
13-year-old on the planet could have kept body and soul together
under the pressure, opportunity and madness that would have been
inevitably ensued? Having been spared or cheated of such a fate,
Bale has, in the years since 'Empire', alternated quietly between
lofty supporting roles ( e.g., 'Henry V') and leads in a couple of
big-budget train wrecks, including an unforgettably monstrous studio
musical ('Newsies') that plummeted into the dirt like a not-so-smart
bomb. Bale breezily rose above the dark times like a gull above
landfill. And then his grown-up profile suddenly lit up stark with
his appearance opposite Winona Ryder in 'Little Women', which
initiated a subterranean cult following that has engulfed the online
world. Now Bale is shooting the lead in the film of Julian Barnes's
novel 'Metroland', and will, sooner or later, very likely emerge
into the glare of certifiable stardom.
"I've
never worked more than once a year," Bale tells me in Paris,
where I meet up with him. "In between I've had nothing written
about me whatsoever. It was definitely a strategy. I like not being
in magazines, not being seen on TV, except when I'm actually in a
film. I want to work as much as I can and still go to parties and be
the geezer in the corner."
Unlike
his contemporaries, Bale has never had a publicist. "I've got a
real minimum amount of people," he explains. "My agent and
my dad." Bale's agent used to run her business out of a Dublin
pub and a public phone on the street--nearby construction workers
would halt work whenever a call came through, and even occasionally
answer the phone as if they were here hired team of receptionists.
His father, David, an ex-hippie/ex-pilot, does for him those parts
of the jobs of a manager and publicist the two deem necessary.
Born
in Wales, Bale has lived in L.A. ever since making 'Newsies', and
isn't quite the recluse the lack of offscreen publicity seems to
suggest. "I love going to nightclubs, but there are things that
should be done anonymously, y' know? The key is to dress like shit,
which I always do." Bale's tales of being accosted in public
back up his claims. There was a New York subway confrontation with a
homeless guy who, after watching Bale get surrounded noisily by
schoolgirls, asked him to sign a dollar bill, saying, "I don't
know who the fuck you are, but maybe that'll be worth more than a
buck someday." Then there was the casting director who bumped
into him in a Prague hotel lobby. "Christian!" the women
cooed right to his face. "It's so great I met you like this, I
have a script you just have to read! This is so terrific--finally I
meet Christian Slater!"
Before
'Empire of the Sun', Bale had only a handful of stage and TV
credits--"All I wanted was to be a Storm Trooper in 'Star
Wars'"--one of which was the miniseries 'Anastasia:The Mystery
of Anna' with then-Mrs.Steven Spielberg, Amy Irving. "I usually
just say I co-starred with Amy Irving and that's how I got into
Empire, but that's not true at all," he says."I was
shooting and auditioning at the same time. Spielberg actually told
me he didn't like my performance in 'Anastasia'." Nevertheless,
Spielberg picked Bale from some 4,000 British kids to shoulder the
film that the world's most reliable pop culture architect decided to
make when Warner Bros. I told him he could make anything. "I
don't really remember thinking one way or another about doing the
work," Bale recalls. "When you're 13, you just do things.
Before we started, my dad told me, 'This could be a fantastic
experience, but it could also be the worst thing that could happen
to you.' There have been moments when I've wished it had never
happened--You know, when your a teenager, you just want to be
normal. Kids would walk up to me saying, 'Where's that kid in
'Empire of the Sun'?' and we'd get into a fistfight. Things like
that happened a lot. But I have no bad memories, and I haven't the
slightest idea what I'd be doing now if it hadn't happened."
After
doing a superb Shakespearean bit in Kenneth Branagh's 'Henry V', and
a turn as Jim in the TNT version of Treasure Island, Bale was
already well on his way to being pigeonholed as a costume-picture
mascot, a situation that wouldn't change for many years to come
(and, who knows, may never).Then he got his second big, starring
role in what turned out to be the cinematic Three Mile Island that
was and still is 'Newsies'. "You say something bad about 'Newsies'
and you have an awful lot of people to answer to." Bale says
with a laugh. He's right: 'Newsies' has a burgeoning cult following
that can be described as nothing less than rabid-one fan literally
changed his name to that of Bale's character in the film, Jack
Kelly.
The
musical that Bale's admirers discovered retroactively, after being
turned on by his performance in 'Little Women', was released at a
time when no one was dying to have the musical form revived. Even if
they had been, it wouldn't have been this musical. "I never had
any interest in doing a musical," Bale says, "I still
don't. In fact, when I first read the script, I thought it wasn't a
musical. Later, after I realized it was, I asked Kenny (Ortega) if
maybe I could duck over here into the pub while the numbers were
going on, and then come out when it was over. I hoped I could be the
lead in a musical without doing any singing and dancing! Eventually
I said, 'Fuck it, let's just do it.' But I had a lot of doubts about
it--I never liked musicals, and even then I knew I'd never do
anything like that again."
Maybe
it's me, but I get the sense that no matter how sunny Bale's sky
gets, 'Newsies' will always occupy a corner of it like a dark cloud
heavy with hailstones. But Bale maintains he's philosophical about
what would have sent other young careers into smoking tailspins.
"I look back on it rather fondly now. It was either go to
college or go to California and do 'Newsies'. I decided to the film.
Which was an education.
"Hey
want to hear about the 'Newsies' prostitution ring?" Bale
offers, happily steering the conversation away from himself.
"We shot at Universal Studios, and it was a massive production,
with hundreds of extras, which is where I got work for lots of my
family and friends, even my dog. But apparently there were a few
extra kids who were offering their services to anybody who paid, all
during the time we shot there. There was even a 'Newsies' pimp ring.
They used the sets, wherever--they were using my dressing room on my
days off, I heard later."
In
addition to surviving 'Newsies', Bale passed through that most
dreaded of child actor gauntlets-puberty. ("No I didn't,"
He blurts. "I never did. I'm bald down there, like an action
figure.") The Bale anonymity tactics served him well.
"I've been lucky," he says, "because there wasn't a
sudden leap where people were saying, 'Oh, what a cute kid,' and
then it's, 'Bloody hell, what happened there, he's got zits and hair
in his armpits--he must be spending a lot of time alone in his
room.' Of course, I was spending a lot of time alone in my
room."
Following
the ill-conceived 'Newsies', there was the ill-conceived 'Swing
Kids', in which Bale played a Glenn Miller-loving Hitler Youth to
Robert Sean Leonard's lispy Hamburg good kid. The movie was
unanimously trashed and died an unceremonious box-office death. Bale
remained untouched--no matter how miserable and bloated the film, it
seemed, Bale landed on his feet unsullied by association. Then, as a
proper reward for his patience and fortitude, Bale won the role of
Laurie, the resident March family boy toy, in Gillian Armstrong's
neoclassic 'Little Women'. It was the wisest casting coup in a film
bursting with casting coups, and the role suddenly cemented Bale's
reputation in Hollywood as something other than a fine child actor
with the luck of a roadrunning squirrel.
"It
was Winona, basically," he says when I ask him how he got the
part. "That's what I've been told. I met with Winona and
Gillian, and we read, and then I got the part. Winona was very
involved in the casting, in every aspect of the film--she'd
contacted Gillian about making the film. She wanted me to play
Laurie. Talk about someone who's seen a lot of movies--she's seen
everything I'd done."
That
included, I'm presuming, 'The Land of the Faraway', a
Swedish/Norwegian/Russian-made fantasy Bale likes to note did better
that Platoon in Sweden that year, and was shot only a few hundred
miles away from Chernobyl when the infamous meltdown occurred.
("We actually left the country for awhile, but nowhere near
long enough, of course. We couldn't wait, what, 2,000 year?")
Another missing link is 'Prince of Jutland', an unreleased medieval
saga (available only on British video) that includes, to the delight
of Bale's nation of followers, his first on-screen bare butt.
'Little Women' was
Bale's exultant coming-of-age in an industry where young actors'
crash-and-burn stories are as common as daily horoscopes.
"'Little Women' was definitely a turning point," Bale
acknowledges. "And not just in career terms. I knew I was doing
something new there, something I liked."
Bale
had no problem with preconceptions as he entered the project.
"I'd never even heard of the book before--in England we read
Lord of the Flies." He'd barely heard of the director, either.
"First night in Vancouver--it was summertime, the snow was
entirely fake--Gillian and I got out for a drink together, and she
mentioned a film of hers, I can't remember what it was, and I looked
at her like, 'I don't have a fucking clue what what you're talking
about.' " Armstrong was no Spielberg, sure, but she'd gotten
Hollywood's attention years before with 'My Brilliant Career', and
she'd earned critical if not box-office respect since then.
"She said, 'Christian, maybe it's a good idea to sort of
research who you'll be working with.' " Bale laughs.
"Mostly, though, I was very possessive on the set of the film.
You've got Winona, Trini Alvarado, Samantha Mathis, Claire Danes,
Kirsten Dunst, Gillian--I was experiencing an incredible male
possessiveness. I'd been there a month, and I sort of resented when
Eric Stoltz arrived. I'll tell you, I'm in the right profession. I
have a jones for actresses. You establish intimacy so easily. When
you meet someone for the first time, someone with the guts to be an
actress, and your auditioning together, you've already broken that
ice. Rehearsals are even better. For European and American girls, my
being a fumbling, dribbling English prat seems to be quite charming.
As long as it works, I'm in luck."
After
supplying the voice of Thomas in 'Pocahontas', Bale rode the 'Little
Women' express to snag a plum role in Jane Campion's 'The Portrait
of a Lady'. "I've only got five or so scenes, but it seems I'm
in the film more than I am because everyone else in constantly
talking about me. That, and each of my scenes is a major
crisis." Bale shot 'Lady' more or less back-to-back with
Christopher Hampton's little-noticed 'The Secret Agent'. "Which
was fun--Gerard Depardieu belching in my dressing room with just his
underpants on, Bob Hoskins yelling, 'You fucking cunt!' at the crew
whenever he got in the mood, Patricia Arquette practicing Kung Fu in
her corsets...."
Only
now is Bale tiring of the period-piece niche he has so guilelessly
carved out for himself. "'Metroland' is set in 1977, and that's
the most contemporary I've gotten," he says of the film he's
currently working on with Breaking the Wave's attention-getter Emily
Watson. "Up to now the most recent I've played is the 1940s.
I'm really looking forward to doing this one: No top hats, no
waistcoats, nothing." Nothing is right: 'Metroland' involves
substantial skin. "The whole film is about sex--how great it
is, is it as great as it used to be, etc. I haven't really worried
about it. Possibly on the first day I'll become suddenly shy, but I
don't imagine I will. It comes down to just pulling off your pants
and standing there naked. Once they've seen everything, there's
nothing else to worry about."
It's
hard to imagine the shock waves that will run through the
international "Balehead" community when their idol steps
boldly into the world of adult semi-smut; for now they've had the
content themselves with freeze-framing and analyzing the spittle of
the Christian-Winona kiss from 'Little Women'. And don't think they
don't do that. Bale's fan club's website withstands an average of
more than 60,000 visitors every week. To put this in perspective,
note that in non-Bale associated Internet chat rooms, Bale is more
talked about than, say, Leonardo Dicaprio or Chris O'Donnell.
The
single-minded passion of Baleheads can be downright creepy, whether
it's online, in the preposterous video rental popularity of 'Newies',
in newsletters or in letter-writing campaigns to studios aimed at
getting Bale into specific films. Bale thumbs covertly through the
sampler newsletter I show him, trying to hide it from the Parisians
swarming around us. "Look at this: 'I love the way his mouth
moves when he talks.' " He starts working his mouth like a
Tourette's victim. "Half of me thinks, let them print and do
whatever they want, it's great, it can't hurt. And the other half of
me is sometimes saying, 'Fucking Christ!' After being quite
mortified a few times, I decided to get involved, so now I can kind
of tell them, 'No, I'd rather you didn't put this in or that into
the newsletter.' The fellow that runs most of it is this Chinese guy
who only sleeps four hours a night and once reorganized the Canadian
National Library system for free, just because he saw it was a mess.
I'm just another project for him."
Perhaps
here are the first glimmerings of what Bale has successfully avoided
all along: watching his public profile slip out of control. "In
a small interview recently I made a joke about how people may start
getting snakes in the mail if they don't give me a role, and soon
after I heard there were discussions online-people wondering, 'Does
he want us to send snakes through the mail?' Amazing. But I don't
think all of my fans are morons. At least I hope not. "Knowing
that this article will probably be devoured by his minions like
piranha chum, I ask Bale if there's anything the fan network doesn't
know about him yet that he'd be willing to divulge. "I have no
penis!" he offers. Then he actually delivers: "Well, my
mother worked in the circus--she was a clown, a dancer, she rode
elephants, she was the lady in the sequins who introduced the
trapeze act. There were incredibly beautiful women walking around
naked all the time. That was the first time I'd seen a naked woman.
There I was in the caravans, seven years old, ogling all these
incredible women walking around completely naked in front of me. My
first kiss was from a young Polish trapeze artist named Barta."
Bale
is hyperaware of his position in the industry, and of his
competition for roles--he knows exactly what Leonardo, Ethan,
Balthazar and Lukas are doing at any given time. While he had the
good fortune to be turned down for the drag Mercutio in 'William
Shakespeare's Romeo & Juliet' after several tryouts, he has been
vying for the next film by gay indie scalawag Todd Haynes ('Safe'),
as well as for the charmingly amoral lead in 'The Talented Mr.
Ripley', a remake of the 1960 Alain Delon noir 'Purple Noon'. If
either he or the Baleheads get their way, the relaxed career place
and public anonymity that Bale has enjoyed up to now may well be a
thing of the past.