The Total Film Interview - John Cusack

A zealously private man, Cusack hides behind a smokescreen of easy charm, casually deflecting any personal enquiries with a near-bionic wit and a lazy, lopsided grin. He often talks in riddles and half-glimpsed truths (“There’s some kind of alchemy with film: part intellect, part psychiatrist, part cheerleader, part jilted lover… All these different things you bring to bear”). He’s wry, sarcastic, screwy, cool, charismatic, goofy and bright – ferociously, shockingly bright – his synapses sparking and his nerve-endings crackling as his words spill out in edgy, arrhythmic sentences: fast and jumbled, careful and halting. He is, in fact, much like the losers, misfits and screw-ups he portrays on screen, the morally ambiguous yet intensely likeable everymen who hover between vice and virtue, identities in crisis. Pauline Kael called him, “The man with question marks in his eyes.” Cusack himself says he’s drawn to characters who “knew it was wrong but did it anyway.” Think his sweet-but-horny college kid in The Sure Thing, his nickel-and-dime conman in The Grifters, his assassin undergoing an existential meltdown in Grosse Pointe Blank. It’s true of Charlie in The Ice Harvest, too, Cusack’s 46th movie in 22 years seeing him essay a “pathetic, spiritually numb” lawyer who skims a cool $2 million off the Mob… with tortuous consequences. A stylised noir, it’s also an indictment of the American Dream. “You get more money and more girls, but in the absence of love and meaning you’re gonna feel nothing,” he states, squinting in the LA sunshine. “Arthur Miller said, ‘An era can be considered over when its illusions have been exhausted.’”

Tantalisingly, Cusack admits he at first turned the role down because it was “too bleak”, saying “sometimes, if you’re going through a hard time, you don’t wanna commit to an exploration of darkness…” He won’t expand, but those half-glimpsed truths keep popping up: “It was easy for me to get in that frame of mind – actors are acquainted with sleaziness more than we’d like to admit”; “I’m not an existentialist myself, but I have romantic leanings that way”; and “Sometimes I think life makes sense, but it’s complicated. It’s not a soundbite answer.”

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine.