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Owen Wilson on getting serious for new film 'No Escape'

jhungary

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@Viet @William Hung I think you guys will like this

Owen Wilson on getting serious for new film 'No Escape' - LA Times

Owen Wilson on getting serious for new film 'No Escape'

Movie audiences love to laugh at Owen Wilson — as the excitement about the "Zoolander" sequel in which he'll once again play obnoxious supermodel Hansel can attest.

The droll, laid-back Wilson is also known for the comedies he's made with his former University of Texas roommate Wes Anderson — including earning an Oscar nomination for co-writing with Anderson the screenplay for "The Royal Tenenbaums" — and with Ben Stiller on more than a dozen projects, including the "Zoolander" films.


But Wilson's new film "No Escape," which opens Wednesday, is no laughing matter. In the thriller, Wilson plays Jack Dwyer, an American businessman who has taken a job with a company in a Southeast Asian country. Soon after his wife, Annie (Lake Bell), and their young two daughters settle into a room at a local hotel in the country, they find themselves caught in the middle of a political uprising.

SIGN UP for the free Essential Arts & Culture newsletter >>

See the most-read entertainment stories >>Open link
"It wasn't a feeling I don't want to do any more action," Wilson noted in a recent interview in West Hollywood, where he was briefly joined by his adorably rambunctious 18-month-old son, Finn. But Wilson, who also has a 4 1/2-year-old son named Robert Ford, recalled receiving offers for roles for which he couldn't envision himself as the character.

That wasn't the case with "No Escape," which seemed more grounded in everyday reality to him.

"When I read the script, it just seemed like an exciting story to me," he said. "The big part of why it seemed liked a good story is the family element. Where I might have a hard time imagining myself playing in an action movie where I am doing almost superhero-type stuff, I could imagine myself playing a father who loves his family and because of that love will do anything to help."


'No Escape' | Trailer
Watch the trailer for "No Escape," in which Owen Wilson plays Jack Dwyer, an American businessman who has taken a job with a company in a Southeast Asian country.

Watch the trailer for "No Escape," in which Owen Wilson plays Jack Dwyer, an American businessman who has taken a job with a company in a Southeast Asian country.

See more videos

His father, Robert, was his inspiration for his role.

"We never went to Southeast Asia and found ourselves in the middle of a revolution," he said. "But it can be stressful for parents taking kids to the state fair and one of them getting lost. That can panic a parent. My dad didn't have any hobbies other than us. I felt I could kind of draw on that for a character like this because it's not hard to imagine what my dad would do."

Sadly, "No Escape" has a tragic timeliness. It's being released less than two weeks after the deadly bombing in the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok, Thailand, that killed 20 and injured 120, many of them foreigners. Dealing with terror and political upheaval has become more commonplace for Western travelers and business workers similar to the events depicted in the film.

"No Escape's" director, John Erick Dowdle, who wrote the script with his brother Drew, wanted an actor to play Jack who felt like he was "one of our friends in the scenario versus someone you've seen do this type of thing over and over and you are expecting them to do it. With Owen, there is a moment where you go, 'I don't know how he gets out of this.'

"It was really important to have that kind of feeling. When casting, we said whoever we find for this we felt needed to fit two criteria — first, does it seem like they would be a wonderful father and second, would it be shocking to see him kill someone."

Drew Dowdle said Wilson was attached for nearly three years to the film while the brothers obtained funding. "We had one instance that we were a day away from going to Thailand and the next day [the funding] imploded," he said. "We said, we hope you stick it out and stay with us. He didn't bat an eye. He said, 'You find the money, and I'm there.' It took us six months to rebuild [the funding]."

"There was a little underdog aspect to get the movie made," said Wilson, with a grin. "As a middle brother, I usually tend to side with the underdogs more. So I think when we finally got there and got a chance to do it, that made it satisfying.""

The film, which is being released by Weinstein Co., was shot in Chiang Mai in northern Thailand in late 2013.

"I think we found a lot of camaraderie in Thailand," said Wilson's co-star Bell, best known for her film "In a World...." I think being in that environment and also playing out circumstances that were pretty foreign to us focused us to lean into each other. Owen really set the tone for the type of commitment that all four of us injected into our performances."

Because he's never taken acting lessons, Wilson worried about his emotional scenes with the two young actresses who play his daughters.

"It was a little like 'Marley & Me,' " he said, referring to his hit movie about a couple's close relationship to their dog. "In 'Marley & Me' when at the end I am suppose to get very upset, I thought, 'I hope I can do it.' And then they bring in the old dog they cast just for this day. This dog walks in and you have a hard time not getting emotional when you see him.

"That is what it felt like doing these scenes with these little girls. You see their little faces looking up. They are acting, but they are trying hard and there is something moving about their effort."

No Escape : Stars Owen Wilson, Pierce Bronsnan and Lake Belle. About an American Engineer (Wilson) travel to a unspecified SE Asia (Denoting Cambodia) country for a new job, and ending up escaping from a murderous rebel regime under deadly revolution and try to fled with his family across the border to Vietnam seeking asylum.


The last scene at Vietnamese checkpoint
 
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I hope more Vietnamese say they like this film which portrays Southeast asians as morons.
 
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I hope more Vietnamese say they like this film which portrays Southeast asians as morons.

How exactly?

You do know this film is actually loosely based on the 2006 Thailand coup, so are you suggesting that in real life, Thai's are loosely moron?
 
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How exactly?

You do know this film is actually loosely based on the 2006 Thailand coup, so are you suggesting that in real life, Thai's are loosely moron?
Did you seriously thought he would spend even 5 min to research the movie ?
 
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I hope more Vietnamese say they like this film which portrays Southeast asians as morons.
Expect Hollywood to portray Southeast as people living in the jungle. LOL

How exactly?

You do know this film is actually loosely based on the 2006 Thailand coup, so are you suggesting that in real life, Thai's are loosely moron?
The issue here is this movie try to portray a Western lovely family trying to escape from the "city jungle, savage, uncompassionate people" of Southeast Asia, loosely based on Thailand uprising. It is even more offensive to exaggerate the uprising equal to targeting foreigners which is what the thrill of this movie is about! What a joke and you sit here telling the Vietnamese to love being portray as savage? LOL
 
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Expect Hollywood to portray Southeast as people living in the jungle. LOL


The issue here is this movie try to portray a Western lovely family trying to escape from the "city jungle, savage, uncompassionate people" of Southeast Asia, loosely based on Thailand uprising. It is even more offensive to exaggerate the uprising equal to targeting foreigners which is what the thrill of this movie is about! What a joke and you sit here telling the Vietnamese to love being portray as savage? LOL

Saw the movie. I agree to your analysis.
 
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Expect Hollywood to portray Southeast as people living in the jungle. LOL

This post alone show that you have not watch the movie.

There are no jungle setting for the whole movie, not even the last 2 minutes shown in this post, which was in a riverbank.

You do know the whole movie is shot at Ching Mai in Thailand, right?

The issue here is this movie try to portray a Western lovely family trying to escape from the "city jungle, savage, uncompassionate people" of Southeast Asia, loosely based on Thailand uprising. It is even more offensive to exaggerate the uprising equal to targeting foreigners which is what the thrill of this movie is about! What a joke and you sit here telling the Vietnamese to love being portray as savage? LOL

As I said, you have no idea what this movie is talking about eh?

No, this movie is not "Hollywood " attempt to portrait of a lovely American family trying to escape the "Savage" south east Asian uncompassionate jungle people. One of the plot of the movies (Why Brosnan wanted to save Owen's family) is EXACTLY the opposite of what you just said. When Pierce Brosnan said to Owen Wilson character that he is the one that responsible for the revolution by forcing the Government to build the water plants, and thus forcing the hand of the protraited government.

LOL, through out the movie, we see from the local hotel worker who died for the Owen family, then the officer worker, then the Buddhist sanctuary caretaker, then the fisherman, where does the movie portrait the "Uncompassionate jungle people you have been talking about?"

Jesus, even if you did not want to see the movie, you should really go look up the synopsis in Wikipedia.

Saw the movie. I agree to your analysis.

lol after you "SAW" the movie, you completely agree with the aforementioned comment, which none of it were in the movie, except for the rebel, which one of them help Owen and his family up on his motorcycle and saw him even tho they are supposedly "Heartless" and "Uncompassionate" people? Exactly which movie you saw? I don't know which one you saw, but unless you are making your own movie while you are watching this, it's quite obivious you had not watched this movie.

Exactly how hypocritical are you?? Maybe if you have not saw the movie like you said, you should let people who actually saw the movie say something here. That way, you won't waste other people bandwidth. Whatever happened to if you don't want to commend on a thread, don't comment? I did not start this thread to bash China, why you have to come here and ruin my thread by bashing the west and the people of Vietnam and Thailand? (Even this HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH THE MOVIE ITSELF)?

@Cossack25A1 @Hamartia Antidote See how hypocritical our Japanese Friend have become?
 
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I have yet to see the movie. Wilson is a nice guy.
 
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@Viet @William Hung I think you guys will like this

Owen Wilson on getting serious for new film 'No Escape' - LA Times

Owen Wilson on getting serious for new film 'No Escape'

Movie audiences love to laugh at Owen Wilson — as the excitement about the "Zoolander" sequel in which he'll once again play obnoxious supermodel Hansel can attest.

The droll, laid-back Wilson is also known for the comedies he's made with his former University of Texas roommate Wes Anderson — including earning an Oscar nomination for co-writing with Anderson the screenplay for "The Royal Tenenbaums" — and with Ben Stiller on more than a dozen projects, including the "Zoolander" films.


But Wilson's new film "No Escape," which opens Wednesday, is no laughing matter. In the thriller, Wilson plays Jack Dwyer, an American businessman who has taken a job with a company in a Southeast Asian country. Soon after his wife, Annie (Lake Bell), and their young two daughters settle into a room at a local hotel in the country, they find themselves caught in the middle of a political uprising.

SIGN UP for the free Essential Arts & Culture newsletter >>

See the most-read entertainment stories >>Open link
"It wasn't a feeling I don't want to do any more action," Wilson noted in a recent interview in West Hollywood, where he was briefly joined by his adorably rambunctious 18-month-old son, Finn. But Wilson, who also has a 4 1/2-year-old son named Robert Ford, recalled receiving offers for roles for which he couldn't envision himself as the character.

That wasn't the case with "No Escape," which seemed more grounded in everyday reality to him.

"When I read the script, it just seemed like an exciting story to me," he said. "The big part of why it seemed liked a good story is the family element. Where I might have a hard time imagining myself playing in an action movie where I am doing almost superhero-type stuff, I could imagine myself playing a father who loves his family and because of that love will do anything to help."


'No Escape' | Trailer
Watch the trailer for "No Escape," in which Owen Wilson plays Jack Dwyer, an American businessman who has taken a job with a company in a Southeast Asian country.

Watch the trailer for "No Escape," in which Owen Wilson plays Jack Dwyer, an American businessman who has taken a job with a company in a Southeast Asian country.

See more videos

His father, Robert, was his inspiration for his role.

"We never went to Southeast Asia and found ourselves in the middle of a revolution," he said. "But it can be stressful for parents taking kids to the state fair and one of them getting lost. That can panic a parent. My dad didn't have any hobbies other than us. I felt I could kind of draw on that for a character like this because it's not hard to imagine what my dad would do."

Sadly, "No Escape" has a tragic timeliness. It's being released less than two weeks after the deadly bombing in the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok, Thailand, that killed 20 and injured 120, many of them foreigners. Dealing with terror and political upheaval has become more commonplace for Western travelers and business workers similar to the events depicted in the film.

"No Escape's" director, John Erick Dowdle, who wrote the script with his brother Drew, wanted an actor to play Jack who felt like he was "one of our friends in the scenario versus someone you've seen do this type of thing over and over and you are expecting them to do it. With Owen, there is a moment where you go, 'I don't know how he gets out of this.'

"It was really important to have that kind of feeling. When casting, we said whoever we find for this we felt needed to fit two criteria — first, does it seem like they would be a wonderful father and second, would it be shocking to see him kill someone."

Drew Dowdle said Wilson was attached for nearly three years to the film while the brothers obtained funding. "We had one instance that we were a day away from going to Thailand and the next day [the funding] imploded," he said. "We said, we hope you stick it out and stay with us. He didn't bat an eye. He said, 'You find the money, and I'm there.' It took us six months to rebuild [the funding]."

"There was a little underdog aspect to get the movie made," said Wilson, with a grin. "As a middle brother, I usually tend to side with the underdogs more. So I think when we finally got there and got a chance to do it, that made it satisfying.""

The film, which is being released by Weinstein Co., was shot in Chiang Mai in northern Thailand in late 2013.

"I think we found a lot of camaraderie in Thailand," said Wilson's co-star Bell, best known for her film "In a World...." I think being in that environment and also playing out circumstances that were pretty foreign to us focused us to lean into each other. Owen really set the tone for the type of commitment that all four of us injected into our performances."

Because he's never taken acting lessons, Wilson worried about his emotional scenes with the two young actresses who play his daughters.

"It was a little like 'Marley & Me,' " he said, referring to his hit movie about a couple's close relationship to their dog. "In 'Marley & Me' when at the end I am suppose to get very upset, I thought, 'I hope I can do it.' And then they bring in the old dog they cast just for this day. This dog walks in and you have a hard time not getting emotional when you see him.

"That is what it felt like doing these scenes with these little girls. You see their little faces looking up. They are acting, but they are trying hard and there is something moving about their effort."

No Escape : Stars Owen Wilson, Pierce Bronsnan and Lake Belle. About an American Engineer (Wilson) travel to a unspecified SE Asia (Denoting Cambodia) country for a new job, and ending up escaping from a murderous rebel regime under deadly revolution and try to fled with his family across the border to Vietnam seeking asylum.


The last scene at Vietnamese checkpoint

Cool its free to watch on youtube!

Expect Hollywood to portray Southeast as people living in the jungle. LOL


The issue here is this movie try to portray a Western lovely family trying to escape from the "city jungle, savage, uncompassionate people" of Southeast Asia, loosely based on Thailand uprising. It is even more offensive to exaggerate the uprising equal to targeting foreigners which is what the thrill of this movie is about! What a joke and you sit here telling the Vietnamese to love being portray as savage? LOL

LOL how did the movie portrayed the Vietnamese as savage?

The only glimpse of any Vietnamese was at the end of the movie. If anything, it portrayed the Vietnamese soldiers as being humane and sympathetic in protecting the family from the cambodians. So how exactly is jhungary “sitting here telling the Vietnamese to love being portray as savage”?? LOL
 
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lol after you "SAW" the movie, you completely agree with the aforementioned comment, which none of it were in the movie, except for the rebel, which one of them help Owen and his family up on his motorcycle and saw him even tho they are supposedly "Heartless" and "Uncompassionate" people? Exactly which movie you saw? I don't know which one you saw, but unless you are making your own movie while you are watching this, it's quite obivious you had not watched this movie.

Exactly how hypocritical are you?? Maybe if you have not saw the movie like you said, you should let people who actually saw the movie say something here. That way, you won't waste other people bandwidth. Whatever happened to if you don't want to commend on a thread, don't comment? I did not start this thread to bash China, why you have to come here and ruin my thread by bashing the west and the people of Vietnam and Thailand? (Even this HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH THE MOVIE ITSELF)?

@Cossack25A1 @Hamartia Antidote See how hypocritical our Japanese Friend have become?

How am i being hypocritical? All i said was i saw the movie , and the tone the movie set was a relatively unstable region. The setting tho is not viet nam, it is more so either Thai or Cambodian (from the writing systems used; as it bears similarity to thai and khmer sanskrit-based alphabet).

Why are you getting all worked up? calm down, take a sip of some lemonade, dude.

please skip to 0:58.

and from the sound of the voices...its not Vietnamese (truong viet) or thai (khon thai), but actually khmer.


from the look of the protester's regalia, looks like they're (film makers) trying to portray the red khmers , khmer rouge. scene is hauntingly similar to the khmer rouge revolution in kampuchea (cambodia) back in the late 70s.

_76151881_khmerrougephnompenh170475_afp.jpg


khmer-rouge.jpg


Sihanouk5-231dd8dcc9a4f39982722301c04da993d3b6914f.jpg
 
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How am i being hypocritical? All i said was i saw the movie , and the tone the movie set was a relatively unstable region. The setting tho is not viet nam, it is more so either Thai or Cambodian (from the writing systems used; as it bears similarity to thai and khmer sanskrit-based alphabet).

Why are you getting all worked up? calm down, take a sip of some lemonade, dude.

The setting is Cambodia because Thailand and Vietnam is obviously not connected by a river. The writing is Cambodian, not Thai.

But how did you agree with zunxi “analysis” that the movie portrayed “Vietnamese people as savages”? It actually protrayed the opposite, that the Vietnamese were the humane ones who saved the white family.
 
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But how did you agree with zunxi “analysis” that the movie portrayed “Vietnamese people as savages”? It actually protrayed the opposite, that the Vietnamese were the humane ones who saved the white family.

yes, you're right its cambodian. thanks for the clarification bro. as for the savage depiction? just the carnage showing in that film --- its trying to , implicity i admit, portray that underneath the veneer of calm , there is still deep seated hatred and brutality --- from the murdering scenes i take from the film.

the film does a disingenuous role in discrediting southeast asia's calm and development.

thanks bro.
 
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I have yet to see the movie. Wilson is a nice guy.

Yes, Wilson is loveable, but in this movie, he have taken away his own laughable demeanour and try to act all seriously. The movie wanted to capture the helpless of the American family being stranded alone in a foreign land which undergo such a lethal situation and how does that project if you are the one that going thru the same thing.

They intentionally casted Owen Wilson but not everyday American Hulk is just because of that, they want it to be an experience that you can relate to, not some hoot shot kill all the rebel and rescue his family.

I would say this is a very good movie in this end. And it is not bad on the box office front too. It make 500% of its budget and which make you wonder, how can you shoot a movie with Owen Wilson and Pierce Brosnan in it with 5 mil budget to begin with?

Cool its free to watch on youtube!



LOL how did the movie portrayed the Vietnamese as savage?

The only glimpse of any Vietnamese was at the end of the movie. If anything, it portrayed the Vietnamese soldiers as being humane and sympathetic in protecting the family from the cambodians. So how exactly is jhungary “sitting here telling the Vietnamese to love being portray as savage”?? LOL

lol, although I am not a keen supporter of YouTube movie, it's nice that you can get it on youtube, officially, you should do what I do, get the DvDs.....

And lol. he is just doing his usual ranting about West and Vietnam, even tho this movie is not about either. Just don't mind people like him and enjoy a good movie.
 
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But how did you agree with zunxi “analysis” that the movie portrayed “Vietnamese people as savages”? It actually protrayed the opposite, that the Vietnamese were the humane ones who saved the white family.

when i saw this movie months ago with some of my friends (some of my friends were white, some blacks, and a hodge podge of asian-americans), the non-asians in my group of friends said something rather callous during our post-movie dinner at a local chinese buffet, "yo, you asians are crazy!"

of course i didn't over-react. i calmly ate as i looked into that friend's eyes.

now imagine if i had said something racially insensitive about say, hmm, i don't know, maybe blacks, or whites, or latinos? id be labeled as a 'racist'. its sad really that here in the united states, there is a free range to poke fun and abuse asians.

And lol. he is just doing his usual ranting about West and Vietnam, even tho this movie is not about either. Just don't mind people like him and enjoy a good movie.

why are you obsessed about maligning me at every post? LOL
 
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How am i being hypocritical? All i said was i saw the movie , and the tone the movie set was a relatively unstable region. The setting tho is not viet nam, it is more so either Thai or Cambodian (from the writing systems used; as it bears similarity to thai and khmer sanskrit-based alphabet).

Why are you getting all worked up? calm down, take a sip of some lemonade, dude.

please skip to 0:58.

and from the sound of the voices...its not Vietnamese (truong viet) or thai (khon thai), but actually khmer.


from the look of the protester's regalia, looks like they're (film makers) trying to portray the red khmers , khmer rouge. scene is hauntingly similar to the khmer rouge revolution in kampuchea (cambodia) back in the late 70s.

_76151881_khmerrougephnompenh170475_afp.jpg


khmer-rouge.jpg


Sihanouk5-231dd8dcc9a4f39982722301c04da993d3b6914f.jpg

I did not call you a hypocrite for talking about Vietnam, I called you a hypocrite because last time you call me out on stalking you for saying "If something that does not related to you, you should not commented on it"

I never said the movie is about Vietnam. The whole movie have not have a single Vietnamese in it, even at the end of the movie the Vietnamese soldier speak English.

The movie, as I said on my first post that this movie is hinting at Cambodia, and the movie is shot entirely in Thailand. I never get why you bring Vietnam into the topic? Just because I tag two Vietnam member, then this thread is automatically become a Vietnam Thread?
 
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