Oscar winner Philip Seymour Hoffman remains one of the best character actors in movies today, and his role as Lancaster Dodd in “The Master” is yet another brilliant performance on his never ending resume. The movie reunites Hoffman with Paul Thomas Anderson who has cast him in five of his six movies. From the gay and painfully timid boom mike operator in “Boogie Nights” to infinitely angry mattress store own Dean Trumbell from “Punch-Drunk Love,” Hoffman has gone from playing one unique character to portraying its polar opposite in another movie to where you wonder how he goes about preparing for each role.
In an interview with Rolling Stone film critic Peter Travers, Hoffman made clear that he was not out to turn Lancaster into some sort of bizarre human being with scary ideas:
“The thing is that this character needs to be as accessible as possible,” Hoffman said. “That when you meet him in the film and then when you get to know him in the film that you don’t judge him so much. I think we (he and Anderson) succeeded in that you actually take him in. He’s a real person, and you can almost see how he’s brought so many people close to him or been so successful. You could see how he can function in the world. You know he’s not too idiosyncratic or too eccentric even. He’s full of passion for his ideas, and some of his ideas are really good ones.”
Hoffman said it was those things that he and Anderson wanted to concentrate on as opposed to the “oddity” of the character. When it came to Lancaster Dodd, Hoffman never looked at him as the head of a cult or even a religion. In his mind, the character was really the leader of a movement and not a fraudulent person.
Of course, much has been said about how “The Master” was inspired by L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology to where many are already nauseated at hearing this said over and over. When talking to the Wall Street Journal’s Rachel Dodes, Hoffman tried to clear up this issue as best he could:
“The idea that L. Ron Hubbard and that movement (Scientology) was the basis for some story in the film is accurate, but it’s really not a film about that, so it isn’t accurate enough for me to play L. Ron Hubbard. And so I didn’t,” Hoffman said. “It wasn’t enough of that kind of story to do that. So I wanted to think about other people because it was a fictional thing and the character is a very fictional character. So, I thought about other people who had that kind of charisma and moved people and people followed them, and what that meant for me. I steered clear of anything having to do with ‘The L. Ron Hubbard Story’ because it’s too specific and the film wasn’t going to support that, so I thought it would be confusing.”
From there, Hoffman was a bit cryptic as to what individuals he based Lancaster Dodd on. Dodes told him that she heard Orson Welles was an inspiration for this role, but Hoffman said he never tried to emulate the “Citizen Kane” filmmaker in “The Master.
“It’s like when you are thinking about something, a lot of ideas go through your head, and references go through your head but ultimately you are just looking for something in yourself. There are certain behaviors, the way people sound. I didn’t really try to play anybody if that’s what you’re looking for.”
Like his co-star Joaquin Phoenix, Philip Seymour Hoffman is getting serious Oscar consideration for work in “The Master.” The fact that he already has one Academy Award for “Capote” doesn’t seem to matter to anybody because the general feeling is he will get a second one at some point in the near future. Whether he does or doesn’t, it is for certain that we can expect many more great performances from this actor as his attention to character remains impeccable.
Related articles:
‘The Master’ is (yes I’m Gonna Say It) Masterful Filmmaking
Joaquin Phoenix and His ‘brutally Physical’ Performance in ‘The Master’
SOURCES:
Peter Travers, “Philip Seymour Hoffman on New Film, ‘The Master’,” ABC News, September 13, 2012.
Rachel Dodes, “‘The Master’ Star Philip Seymour Hoffman: ‘It’s Not a Scientology Movie’,” Wall Street Journal, September 7, 2012.