Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

People: For del Toro, things were found in ‘Fire’


Associated Press Benicio del Toro
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Terry Lawson Detroit Free Press

Benicio Del Toro is a man of few words, both on and off the screen. Since making a major impression as the often indecipherable criminal Fred Fenster in 1995’s “The Usual Suspects,” Del Toro has specialized in characters for whom actions speak louder than words – preserving what he does have to say for critical, and often heartbreaking, pronouncements (“21 Grams,” “The Pledge”).

Del Toro is again the silent type in “Things We Lost in the Fire,” which opened Friday, but he’s not so silent. He’s a longtime junkie who makes an attempt at recovery when his lifelong best friend (David Duchovny) dies and the man’s widow (Halle Berry) asks him to move in with her and her two children. Del Toro offers a few words about “Fire.”

Q: I’ve not really read a lot about your acting style or technique. Are you a researcher?

A: Yeah, to some degree. I don’t believe you have to shoot junk to understand addiction. I spent some time in Maryland with recovering addicts, hearing the stories, hanging out. I went to NA (Narcotics Anonymous) meetings. And yeah, I’ve got friends that became addicts, for various reasons, not all of them tragic. I knew their stories, or I thought I did. Nobody really knows who anybody is until they walk in their shoes a little. It’s what the movie’s about.

Q: While this isn’t a romantic comedy or anything, it’s not the sort of story we might expect you to play the lead in. Why did you take the part?

A: I guess you’re right. I don’t know. I’m not against doing a romantic comedy if it’s as honest as this movie is. When they brought the material to me, I said, “You know, this is really strong, but there is great danger this can get sappy if it’s not done right.” I needed some assurance it wouldn’t go that way, and it didn’t.

Q: The most touching scenes in the film are you with the kids. Who would have guessed it?

A: I love working with kids, man. They’re so real if you don’t turn them into little robots, just let them react naturally. I thought it was important to show how comfortable he is with them because it reminds him of when he was happy hanging out as a kid with their father.

Q: You’re currently, and finally, making the long-promised Che Guevara movie with your “Traffic” director, Steven Soderbergh. How is that working out?

A: Hard. It’s the hardest thing I’ve done so far, logistically and historically and dramatically. It’s an ambitious project. We’re trying to tell the whole story of an Argentine named Ernesto who became a very different man named Che when he got to Cuba. It’s not a story of some myth on a T-shirt, that’s for sure.

The birthday bunch

Keyboardist Manfred Mann is 67. Singer Elvin Bishop is 65. TV judge Judy Sheindlin (“Judge Judy”) is 65. Actor Everett McGill (“Twin Peaks”) is 62. Trumpeter Lee Loughnane of Chicago is 61. Guitarist Charlotte Caffey of the Go-Go’s is 54. Actress Carrie Fisher is 51. Singer Julian Cope is 50. Guitarist Steve Lukather of Toto is 50. Singer-bassist Nick Oliveri (Queens Of The Stone Age) is 36. Keyboardist Charlie Lowell of Jars of Clay is 34. Actor Will Estes is 29.