Advertisement

‘The Master’: Paul Thomas Anderson on actors improvising [Video]

Share via

If you have seen Paul Thomas Anderson’s “The Master,” you might reasonably assume that very little was left to chance.

From its precise cinematography to striking score, the writer-director’s drama about a troubled drifter (Joaquin Phoenix) and a charismatic leader of a new movement (Philip Seymour Hoffman) feels as well-planned as a military operation.

But in this excerpt from the Envelope Screening Series this week, Anderson explains that his two lead actors brought far more to their performances than he ever imagined, and that the film’s production team frequently improvised.

Advertisement

PHOTOS: Deconsctructing ‘The Master’

Both actors bring a distinct physicality to “The Master”: Phoenix looks like a man coming unhinged at every joint, and Hoffman, though hardly slim, seems to float through his scenes.

“They obviously took their cues from the script,” Anderson said, “and kind of created something bigger and better than I ever could have written out.”

Advertisement

The film’s opening sequence, in which Phoenix’s Freddie Quell hacks apart coconuts and simulates sex with a sand castle shaped like a woman, was all invented on the spot.

“We just wanted to go to a beach and start doing things,” Anderson said.

ALSO:

Envelope Screening Series: ‘The Sessions’

Envelope Screening Series: ‘Rust and Bone’

Advertisement

Oscar Buzzmeter: Panelists’ awards predictions

MORE COVERAGE

PHOTOS: Memorable red carpet moments


TIMELINE: Academy Awards through the years


THE ENVELOPE: Awards insider

Advertisement