Ep 37. Jake Gyllenhaal

Published: Feb. 26, 2020, 11:35 p.m.

b'Jake Gyllenhaal has become somewhat synonymous with beyond-brutal physical transformations for movies like Nightcrawler, and more recently (and even more brutally), for the role of boxer Billy Hope. But after crying three times over a first-draft script for Southpaw, he knew it was worth taking some punches for. He\\u2019s no masochist, but calls any work needed to tell the story of characters that fascinate him a joy. Gyllenhaal is the kind of actor who knows not only that his character bears a certain scar or walks a certain way, but why. He\\u2019s become known for going deep, and seems embarrassed and proud in equal parts about how seriously he takes his work; the same guy who\\u2019ll spend five months in a boxing ring or memorize an entire script just to sound as robotic as Louis Bloom will also tell you the best analogy for acting is Super Mario Brothers. Level One, to be specific.\\n\\nThough much has been made of his on screen metamorphoses, his most profound change in recent years is one we didn\\u2019t realize we were seeing. After coming to wide attention and critical acclaim in films like Donnie Darko and Brokeback Mountain, he found himself in the enviable position of being very young and very successful in Hollywood. That\\u2019s when everyone in the business will tell you exactly which projects and path will guarantee you a lucrative career. And that\\u2019s when Gyllenhaal stepped back and decided it was time to listen to his own voice about what he wanted to do and what his work would say about him. The results are sometimes perplexing (Enemy), or darkly comic (Nightcrawler), but always worth watching. And for Gyllenhaal, richly rewarding \\u2013 the spoils being the experience, worldview and friendships he takes with him from every role.\\n\\nFrom Southpaw, he learned that a mere five pounds of pressure is all it takes to knock a guy\\u2019s brain against the side of his skull and put him down, if you know just where to land it. It\\u2019s the kind of instinct that told him just how to play one of the most touching and terrifying scenes in that film, and the same instinct that now guides the career he\\u2019s designing for himself. In this issue, Gyllenhaal discusses his work ethic, how he chooses and prepares for roles, and why he\\u2019d like to see someone else take a shot at playing them \\u2013 really. It\\u2019s an esoteric conversation, but don\\u2019t worry; you\\u2019ll love it even if you\\u2019re not into Talking Heads, Bruce Springsteen or Wild Geese.'