Pierce Brosnan on How The Greatest Tapped Into a Terrifying Night He'll Never Forget

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In Shana Feste's new drama The Greatest, Pierce Brosnan and Susan Sarandon play parents who are grieving the car accident death of their teenage son (Aaron Johnson) in wildly different ways: he's buttoned-up and avoiding the issue, while she lashes out at others, including their younger child (Johnny Simmons) and the woman (Carey Mulligan) who's pregnant with their late son's baby. It's heavy material, and Brosnan was originally reluctant to sign on: the 56-year-old actor has dealt with his own fair share of grief in real life -- his first wife Cassandra died of ovarian cancer in 1991, and his son Sean was almost killed in a car accident in 2000 -- and Brosnan was unsure if he wanted to go to those emotional places while filming.

In an interview with Movieline, Brosnan discussed how he changed his mind, the guilt he feels over using his personal experiences as an actor, and his take on the evolution of the suddenly white-hot Mulligan.

When I talked to Johnny Simmons about this script, he said he was so excited to delve into a darker role and more emotional story than he usually gets to do...and those were the exact reasons you thought you didn't want to do the script. Have you gotten to the point where you think, "I've done roles like this and I know what they take out of me"? Was that your concern?

Yes, I suppose so. Just knowing that to play a grieving father who's lost his son...how do I relate to that? Well, I relate to that through my own life's experiences. To almost lose a son on a dark Malibu night, a feeling I'll never forget and a night I'll never forget, you know that you're gonna go there, that you're going to have to dig into that hurt. Just that alone is not an area where you get excited and think, "Oh great, I'll do it!" At the same time, though, there is a want, a desire to do the work. It comes with an ambivalence.

Does reliving those emotions provide any sort of catharsis for you?

You touch on the relevance of your own life. You go to that sense memory. Then, you try to let the text of the story at hand have some marriage with that feeling that you can remember and have some sense of performance. It comes with a certain amount of guilt of using your own life, but that's what you do as an actor. You use the emotions and experiences in your life, the moments you felt fear or happiness or joy or anger or remorse. It depends on how well you do it.

Your character is very repressed throughout almost the entire movie, but in a quirk of scheduling, you actually shot his cathartic emotional breakdown on the first day of shooting. When something like that happens, are you essentially working backwards from that for the rest of the shoot?

You know, you read the text over and over until it's clear in your mind. You know that's the aria, the high C of the character where he's going to, the transformational moment. You'd rather it wasn't Day 1, but it had to be. Hopefully, you've plotted it out intelligently, and at the same time you don't know exactly what you're gonna do. In the moment, you just go for it, and we didn't say less or more or anything like that -- nothing was discussed. It was just what you see there, done in one or two takes.

Your character is able to sort of compartmentalize his grief, while his wife lashes out at him for it, because she's living with it every moment. Could you recognize those coping mechanisms?

I could sympathize and empathize with both parties as an actor. My character is so emotionally adrift and so fearful of letting the demons come up. I don't know. I don't know if I have an answer for that, really.

Carey Mulligan was an unknown when you made this film together, and today, she's an Oscar-nominated actress in a high-profile relationship with huge films on the way. When you see her now, does it seem like she's changed at all?

No, she's still the same Carey. She has a sheen to her, a gloss to her now. She sparkles. It's been good; she's a young woman, blossoming. It's been a joy to see that and be part of that, and to feel some participation in her career. She's the best, she's like a daughter, a young woman you've discovered. To be there at the beginning of her career is such a gift. You want the best for her, you want to see her walk off with that Oscar next time. I thought she was incredible in An Education.

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Comments

  • Lara says:

    Last night, I rented this movie, not because I had heard of it, because the brief description on the back of the case had me captivated. It was my life story. It was painful to watch and brought back all those memories, but I must say...the greatest.

  • kathy hobbs says:

    I cried through the entire movie.... very touching.. the director brilliant. I know so many people that must live in darkness for a while before they accept the death of aloved one. I personally and thank goodness that I haven't had to experience this yet but know of families that have. I only know that at some point I will. For some reason I connected Susan Surandon (spelling) right from the getgo maybe b/c I'm so intune with my boys ages 16, 18 and 20. To loose a child..... uh... I feel I would do the same as she did and want to know the very last minute of my childs death. I'm now taking a deep breath and my eyes are swollen. Kudo's to the director.