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Saturday, 5 September 2015

Robert Downey, Jr. Talks Walking Out of That 'Avengers' Interview - Listen Here!

Robert Downey, Jr. Talks Walking Out of That 'Avengers' Interview - Listen Here!
Robert Downey, Jr. is addressing walking out of an interview earlier this month when things got “a little Diane Sawyer.”

“I just wish I had left sooner,” the 50-year-old actor told Howard Stern today on his show. “First of all, I don’t even know the guy’s name, but I know he pulled the same garbage on [Quentin] Tarantino, and Tarantino stayed in his chair and lit him up for five minutes.”

WATCH: Robert Downey, Jr. walks out of an interview when things get too personal

“I’m one of the guys who is always assuming the social, kind of decorum is in play, and that we’re promoting a superhero movie — a lot of kids are going to see it — and this has nothing to do with your creepy, dark agenda,” Robert added. “I just realized, too, that I’m a 50-year-old guy, I use fancy words on ‘The Howard Stern Show,’ and yet I’m completely unevolved when it comes down to simple boundaries. Like, ‘You know what? You’re weirding me out. You are a bottom-feeding muckraker.’”

“What I have to do in the future is just give myself permission to say, ‘That this is more than likely a syphilitic parasite, and I need to distance myself from this clown, otherwise I’m probably going to put hands on somebody, and then there’s a real story,’” Robert said.


Robert Downey Jr. Talks Avengers: Age Of Ultron

You could, of course, call the Marvel Cinematic Universe the House That RDJ Built. Without Robert Downey Jr. blazing a trail as Tony Stark in the original Iron Man back in 2008, chances are the MCU would have spluttered and died long before Avengers: Age Of Ultron was a glint in Joss Whedon’s eye. So it makes sense that the second Avengers movie revolves around Stark, with Tony’s well-intentioned plan to ease the pressure on his super-friends by creating Ultron, a global AI police force, going somewhat awry. When the virtually unstoppable Ultron becomes self-aware and declares humanity personae non grata, it’s up to a guilt-ridden Tony to go toe-to-toe with his deranged creation. The effect this will have on the generally happy-go-lucky Stark will be fascinating, given that Downey is about to start work on Captain America: Civil War, which will pit the billionaire genius playboy philanthropist against Chris Evans’ walking flag, Steve Rogers. Is Tony about to become the villain?
We spoke to Downey on the phone in early January, and started off by asking about his working relationship with the man behind Ultron’s mo-cap mask, James Spader.
Last time we spoke, on set, you hadn’t yet worked with your old pal James Spader on this movie. What was that experience like? 
He could have done it the easy way and instead he said, ‘No, if I’m gonna do this, I want to have the experience’. He's got his big hit show (The Blacklist) and I feel that he just wanted a real counterpoint to that, wanted to really dive into doing something that can be extremely tough and thankless. And yet that voice and that personality and what he invested in this iconic villain I thought was kinda great, but it was also kinda silly. I know him from literally my first movie in Los Angeles, Tough Turf, and from Less Than Zero, and he’s always been reclusive. So I could not speak to him for a decade, but he’s one of those guys who you pick up the phone he goes, (affects pretty good Spader voice) “Anyway, Bobby, true romantic love is… well, I’m in it. Were you napping? Do you mind if I sit down?” He’s just Jimmy. He’s coming in and doing this jazzy Shakespearean thing, and you believe that somebody that has that much personality and that much wit and that much emotive capability is a threat. That’s the important thing.
Robert Downey Jr. Talks Avengers: Age Of Ultron
You did scenes with him in his mo-cap onesie, with a giant Ultron face suspended three feet above his actual face. Was that surreal?
Honestly, no more surreal than what happens in any of these movies. Age Of Ultron feels like a beginning and an ending. In the script there’s a lot of references to that - it’s the ending of the beginning, the beginning of the ending – and honestly, what I was marvelling at in being there, back and forth to Shepperton and staying in Richmond up the road from Hemsworth and hanging out with Jimmy and getting to know Aaron Taylor-Johnson and all these new cast members, it’s just wild. It’s just incredible what’s occurred and how part of the furniture of popular entertainment it’s become. It’s become the gold standard of this genre of filmmaking, and it’s just a bunch of really cool, nice, talented folks who are all kind of scratching their heads but will roll up their sleeves and say, “Okay, let’s not take ourselves too seriously but let’s continue to take this as seriously as we did when we were wondering if we should join the party.”
As someone with a great Iron Man sequel under his belt, but also a not-so-great Iron Man sequel under his belt, what does that teach you when you’re going into a huge follow-up like this?

Robert Downey Jr. Talks Avengers: Age Of UltronYou never want to lean on things that you did knowing that it was like a back-up parachute. You don’t want to pretend there’s a back-up to that back-up parachute. And yesterday’s approach doesn’t necessarily work today. That’s what I really enjoy - that double sliding scale Spock Chess thing. How do you do it? How did you ever do it? How did you do it before, and how are you going to do it next time? I think, ultimately, it comes down to the very self-deprecating Mr. Whedon, who is more exacting on himself than he could ever be on anyone else. But he’s specific and in charge and I found him enjoying himself a bit more this time while simultaneously holding himself to a higher standard. You can’t do the same thing, only smaller, not as cool. There’s that other trap - where it’s, “Everything is bigger! Better! Do you know how many gigabytes we used in the opening sequence? How many terabytes?” Ultimately it comes down to that. I’ve never seen a call sheet that left less to the imagination. It was an 82-page call sheet. I’m sure this comes from every dropped ball over the course of these dozen or so movies so far. I’m sure they were incorporated into ‘never again’. And so there were very few quote-unquote logistical mistakes made, and I think it creates a safer environment to do something that’s really hard. But anyway, I could see Joss was having more fun and letting go a little bit more while simultaneously putting himself through one flaming hoop after another.
Joss said he’s not going to do the next two Avengers movies. Will you miss him? 
It’s funny, nobody really ever goes away entirely from the Marvel universe. I’m sure whatever’s going on in ten years, whether I’m receiving a red cent or whether anyone still associates me with the product, there’s still always going to be a level as long as anybody from the original team is there, where you’re connected. More than I would miss him, I would be remiss to say that these are such Herculean gigs, so it’s important for Joss to take all the leverage he’s earned and to apply it to something else. Ultimately he’s a creator, and I think what he did is he’s very aptly taken pre-existing material and spun it into something that feels like a creation.
Let’s talk about the movie itself. Tony creates Ultron for a good reason, only to have it all spin out of control – not the first time that Tony’s hubris has gotten him into trouble. 
Interestingly enough, it’s the ironic flip side. The thing I’m trying to create was to stop all this. It’s a ‘damned if you do’ type thing. Look, in some ways it’s just a device. Every character has to have something to do that makes sense to set up. What I appreciated was that it was a new flip for Tony without seeming out of character. What I appreciate is that he is maturing and that he is becoming a benefactor of something vastly different than his father ever could have imagined. The promised legacy of Iron Man 2 has really been realised in a way that I go, “Oh, that’s creative and smart and it keeps pushing the peanut forward and it’s interesting and new and it makes space”. Tony has always been interested in how he can make more space for himself under the guise of having a moral psychology and a spiritual awakening of sorts in the cave, but now it’s about being a worker amongst workers and trying to find his place and go back to the simplicity of where it all started, which is that a gal who used to work for him became his love. That’s been such a huge part of what I think differentiated him. I think Tony’s the only guy who actually, except for when he was really having a ball when we first met him, is in a committed relationship that he doesn’t waver on for years and years and years. That to me is cool.
So it’s not necessarily a Dr Frankenstein/Frankenstein’s Creature-type relationship. 
Well, yeah. Except that, unlike Dr Frankenstein, Tony was never attempting to do this. I just love the idea that he can have an impulse to do good that finds its way back and becomes something else. Every time you roll the dice with your own best thinking, regardless of your intention, these things take on a life of their own. Tony’s Ultron defence system is supposed to let everybody retire and for a guy who’s still got a lot of piss and vinegar - in Iron Man 3, when we left him he was basically saying, “You know what, I don’t even need the suit. I’m just a badass.” Then what I feel happened is he went back east and he does the responsible thing for all these other people and puts a roof over their head and has an idea.
Is it fair to say that Tony feels a great deal of guilt about what happens with Ultron? And what does that guilt do to someone who’s so flip and glib all the time? 
It’s so funny. My old material, those 15 minutes don’t hold up anymore. And yet it was such a strong 15. You have to grow up and say I don’t need to tap-dance and have the room turn upside-down anymore. I need to be true to the character and I need to be true to what the filmmakers and the studio are doing with the trajectory of this whole big juggernaut. As far as Tony’s guilt, I think it’s always tougher when you had a pure heart going in. I think that’s the rough part. ‘I don’t operate like I used to. This is a really good idea, don’t you see?’ But he missed something. I think it’s the guilt of recognising that my best thinking can still bring me back to a place where I wish I’d just kept my mouth shut.
Robert Downey Jr. Talks Avengers: Age Of Ultron
Your deal was, initially, for two more Avengers films. Now you’ve signed on for more, starting with Captain America: Civil War. Why? 
I’m crazy about Evans. I really am. I don’t know why or how to explain this particular kinship we have. By the way, he hasn’t called me in six months. Honestly, in order for this whole thing to have worked, I did my part, Hemsworth knocked it out of the stadium and then it fell on Cap. That was the riskiest. It was the one that had the highest degree of difficulty in making it translate to a modern audience. It was the Russos and Chris who, I think, really hit the line drive and won the series. I remember glancing through it going, “Wow, that’s a different way to go”. They said, “If we have you, we can do this or Cap 3 has to be something else”. It’s nice to feel needed.
At this point it ceases about being about announcements of contracts and deal points and Forbes and all that. And to see Chadwick being announced for Black Panther, I go, ‘Wow, man, Marvel is making all the right moves and they’re not doing it because it’s PC, they’re doing it because it’s exciting’. So why would I be the one to go, ‘I’m not going on the road. I don’t get along with the keyboardist’. Who cares? Who cares? And look, I also recognise that I’ll be turning 50 by the time I promote this movie. The clock is ticking down on the amount of memories and participation that I would allow myself and not embarrass the medium with. And when they pitched it to me and when I had a couple of ideas and when they said we like those ideas, let’s do those. Then there’s all this competition too. I don’t do this because I look at it as a competition, but I look at the marketplace and go, ‘Maybe if these two franchises teamed up and I can take even a lesser position in support, with people I like and directors I respect, maybe we can keep things bumping along here a little longer than they might have’.
There seems to be a feeling that Tony’s character may have to be recalibrated, though, for Civil War, and that he may become an antagonist. 

So, do you see Tony as a bad guy in that movie? 
Yeah. Again, it’s natural to change your views. The main thing to me is, and this is where I think the Russos are quite brilliant and where Kevin backed the play, is what sort of incident could occur and what sort of framework could we find Tony in? The clues are in Ultron about where we might find him next. But what would it take for Tony to completely turn around everything he’s stood for, quote-unquote, because he was the right-wing guy who could still do his own thing. When the first Iron Man came out the liberals and conservatives were both like, ‘You’re our guy’. Yes! Score! But the idea of Tony being able to march into Washington and say, ‘I’ll sign up’, wouldn’t have made sense if the political climate in the real world hadn’t shifted the way it has. It’s a little bit of things following a real world continuum in, ‘What would you do?’ There’s always the bigger overarching question, that Joss brings up all the time - it’s kind of weird that these guys would have all these throw downs all over planet Earth and it looked like a little collateral damage happened over there, and yet when the movie’s over, it’s like nobody minds. You have to figure, ‘Were you to ask the question, what would the American government do if this were real? Wouldn’t it be interesting to see Tony doing something you wouldn’t imagine?’
I wouldn’t put it that way. Ultimately it’s Steve’s story; it doesn’t say ‘Iron Man 4: Civil War’. I think that’s great too. I think Chris [Evans] has been hungry to bring even more of an underside and some shadow to that. I remember the comics - on the surface you got the sense that Cap was baseball and apple pie, but underneath there was all this churning stuff of being a man out of time. Now we know he’s made his peace with that. What’s the bigger issue? It can have a little something to do with the past, but it can be about someone becoming more modernised in their own conflict.
Tony’s relationship with The Vision – the Artist Formerly Known As J.A.R.V.I.S. – should be interesting. And, interestingly, even though this is your fifth Marvel film with Paul Bettany, it’s the first time you’ll share screen time. What was the experience of seeing him as The Vision like?
[Jon] Favreau was visiting the set and went, ‘JARVIS, what did they fuckin’ do to you?’ I would maybe see Bettany on the street or at a premiere party, maybe. And the suit? Everybody has to pay their pound of flesh. I remember on Iron Man 2 when Cheadle came out in the Mark II, it’s the least comfortable suit, by their own admission, designed for any movie and he came out and stopped the party. I looked at him and it was right before lunch and he’d been in it for three hours. I thought, ‘Poor Don’, but you gotta do it. And for Bettany, they did a number on him with this absolutely awesome Ultron look, and it also reminded me of the times when I’ve been in special effects make-up. The very first thing he had to do was perch on the end of a precipitous ledge and stand up at the right time with the wind blowing and look right down the barrel, and 20 other things were happening, and it was like, ‘Yep, welcome’. But when - and I won’t give much of anything away - Vision gets to express and enter and find his place in earnest respect on the playing field, it was like an exceptionally well-executed, poetic, badass, “Aha!” moment for all of us. Joss was very particular about that in a different way than he was with Jimmy. I think people are going to get a kick out of the creative decisions about how Vision fits in.

Robert Downey Jr. Confirms The Future Of Iron Man 4

Robert Downey Jr. Confirms The Future Of Iron Man 4 image
It was just last year that Robert Downey Jr. signed a contract extension with Marvel Studios, confirming him for appearances in both The Avengers: Age of Ultron and the inevitable Avengers 3, but one title that was left out of all the talks was any plans for Iron Man 4. Many took this as a sign that the number of Tony Stark solo films would be ending at three - and today new quotes have arrived that pretty much confirm that speculation.

"There isn’t one in the pipe. No, there’s no plan for a fourth Iron Man." That was the rather blunt response that Downey Jr. gave to Variety recently when asked about the potential future of the successful comic book franchise. The actor is currently up at the Toronto International Film Festival promoting his new movie The Judge, which is the actor's first dramatic film since 2009's The Soloist.

Anyone who is in any way familiar with the history of contract talks between Robert Downey Jr. and Marvel shouldn't be too surprised that the star's stay as Tony Stark may not extend past The Avengers 3. As, statistically, the biggest draw in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Downey Jr. has long had an upper hand in negotiations with the company - to the point where he even got them to pay him $50 million for his work inThe Avengers - a figure that he himself has confirmed. Because of these hardball tactics, there was a time when there was a possibility that the Oscar-nominee wouldn't be in The Avengers 2 - and writer/director Joss Whedon even said that he wouldn't do the movie without him. It's not hard to see why Marvel might not be eager to jump back into contract extension conversations for an Iron Man 4.

Furthermore, while Downey Jr. was undoubtedly an extremely important player in the establishment of Marvel Studios as a blockbuster success, the company has been doing just fine making movies without him recently. James Gunn's Guardians of the Galaxy and Joe and Anthony Russo's Captain America: The Winter Soldiercurrently stand as the two biggest domestic releases of the year, and both achieved their positions without Iron Man's presence (provided you ignore the blink-and-you-miss-it photo of the character in the latter film). It's true that Downey Jr. has appeared in all of the studio's top four titles, but the comic book giant is learning how to achieve big things without the star's presence.

So, if Iron Man 4 isn't part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe's Phase Three plans - what projects are coming up? In addition to Peyton Reed's Ant-Man, the Russos'Captain America 3, and Gunn's Guardians of the Galaxy 2, they are also working on seven untitled projects that will be coming out between now and 2019 - three of which are all but confirmed to be Doctor Strange, Thor 3, and The Avengers 3. Will Iron Man's presence be missed, or do you think Marvel can move on without him?

From heroin and loaded guns to £51m best-paid star in Hollywood: Rise, fall and rebirth of Robert Downey Jr

For the best part of a decade he was Hollywood’s most notorious cautionary tale.

After being tipped for stardom, Robert Downey Jr spent the late 1990s and early 2000s addicted to drugs and reduced to earning eight cents an hour scrubbing pizza pans in the kitchen of the LA County jail during regular stints in prison.

So it is all the more remarkable that the 50-year-old was yesterday named the best-paid male actor for the third year running, raking in £51million.

Just how did he achieve this remarkable change of fortunes? Fittingly a superhero transformation is behind his success.
Forbes, which compiled the list, said Downey Jr has managed to earn the ‘stratospheric’ amount thanks to his starring role in the Iron Man films, what has become the biggest movie franchise in the world.

He was first cast as eccentric billionaire inventor Tony Stark, who transforms into Iron Man, seven years ago, alongside Gwyneth Paltrow, who plays his love interest, Pepper Potts.

Since then he has starred in four more films. Avengers: Age of Ultron, the most recent instalment, has pulled in a massive £830million worldwide since its release earlier this year.

These days there are remarkable parallels between the actor and his on-screen alter-ego.

Like Stark, Downey Jr lives in Malibu, but in an eccentrically decorated £10million ranch with its own gym, rose-covered stabling for 12 horses and riding rings. He also owns a £5million pad in the trendy LA neighbourhood of Venice Beach.
The luxury doesn’t stop there. He travels by private jet, has his own chef and indulges eccentricities in true Hollywood diva fashion, taking his furniture with him when he films on location.

Yet it was not that many years ago that it looked like he would lose his life to substance abuse.

The star reportedly had his first experience of drugs when he was only six years old after his father, a drug-addict underground film maker, Robert Downey, let him try a cannabis joint.

The actor claims he started taking drugs with his father as an emotional bonding experience. He recalls he was soon getting drunk every night and ‘making a thousand phone calls in pursuit of drugs’.


Dropping out of school early to study acting, he was spotted playing a drug-addled rich kid in the 1987 cult film Less Than Zero.

As his profile grew, he had flings with a string of Hollywood actresses including Marisa Tomei, and had a much longer relationship with Sarah Jessica Parker, years before she became famous in Sex And The City.

After being tipped for stardom, Robert Downey Jr spent the late 1990s and early 2000s addicted to drugs and reduced to earning eight cents an hour scrubbing pizza pans in the kitchen of the LA County jail during regular stints in prison (pictured in court in 1999)  

After being tipped for stardom, Robert Downey Jr spent the late 1990s and early 2000s addicted to drugs and reduced to earning eight cents an hour scrubbing pizza pans in the kitchen of the LA County jail during regular stints in prison (pictured in court in 1999)  

In 2001, he was arrested for being under the influence of a controlled substance

A courtroom appearance in 1997 where he was  jailed for violating parole

In 2001, he was arrested for being under the influence of a controlled substance (police photo, left). It followed a courtroom appearance in 1997 where he was  jailed for violating parole (right)

He once told a judge that taking drugs was ‘like having a shotgun in my mouth with my finger on the trigger, and I like the taste of gun metal’ (pictured in court in 2001 for drugs charges)

He once told a judge that taking drugs was ‘like having a shotgun in my mouth with my finger on the trigger, and I like the taste of gun metal’ (pictured in court in 2001 for drugs charges)
Sarah J Parker and Robert Downey Jr star in 1992 voting campaign
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His starring role in Sir Richard Attenborough’s 1992 biopic Chaplin should have propelled him into the film industry’s hall of fame.

He was routinely described – not least by himself – as the greatest actor of his generation, bringing an unmatched intensity and versatility to the screen.

Instead, drug abuse dragged him to the bottom.

His first marriage, to actress Deborah Falconer in 1992, produced a son, Indio, but Downey Jr’s repeated trips to jail and rehab for heroin and cocaine abuse destroyed the relationship.

On one occasion he was arrested, naked and hallucinating, at the wheel of his Porsche. Another time, he was discovered in a foetal position in a vermin-infested alley behind a squalid LA hotel.

He once told a judge that taking drugs was ‘like having a shotgun in my mouth with my finger on the trigger, and I like the taste of gun metal’. Guns and drugs were mutual obsessions. Downey Jr once turned up to meet the British director Mike Figgis two hours late, barefoot and carrying a loaded shotgun he couldn’t explain.

In April 1996, he was arrested for possession of heroin, cocaine and a .357 Magnum handgun – this one unloaded – while roaring down Hollywood’s Sunset Boulevard.


Despite his ups and downs, the actor has gone onto become the highest paid in Hollywood - beating the likes of Tom Cruise and Johnny Depp

Despite his ups and downs, the actor has gone onto become the highest paid in Hollywood - beating the likes of Tom Cruise and Johnny Depp

His success is down to his titular role in the smash box office Iron Man - which spawned four more films

His success is down to his titular role in the smash box office Iron Man - which spawned four more films

His starring role in Sir Richard Attenborough’s 1992 biopic Chaplin could have propelled him into the film industry’s hall of fame if not for the drugs
The Marvel franchise returned him to the A-list

His starring role in Sir Richard Attenborough’s 1992 biopic Chaplin could have propelled him into the film industry’s hall of fame if not for the drugs but the Marvel franchise returned him to the A-list
Robert Downey Jr SMOOCHES wife at Iron Man 3 premiere
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In 1997, after missing repeated drugs tests, he was given a 180-day jail sentence for violating probation but was caught fighting with another inmate. Fellow prisoners reportedly targeted the celebrity in their midst and Downey Jr twice woke up in a pool of his own blood.

‘I would never tell you the worst things that have happened to me,’ he once said of his time behind bars.

The actor spent another year incarcerated, this time undergoing drug treatment, in 1999. A week after his release he joined the cast of the TV series Ally McBeal as the new love interest of its main character, played by Calista Flockhart. But the job didn’t last.

In 2001, he was sacked from the series following another drugs arrest in which he had been found wandering the streets, barefoot and high on drugs. His long-suffering wife followed the example of Sarah Jessica Parker and left him, taking their son with him.

He was by now a pariah in Hollywood and, pursued over unpaid taxes, he almost went bankrupt.

Then, in 2003, he met his current wife, producer Susan Levin. Downey Jr credits her with his remarkable turnaround as she insisted she would never marry him unless he gave up drugs for good.

In 2003, he met his current wife, producer Susan Levin. Downey Jr credits her with his remarkable turnaround as she insisted she would never marry him unless he gave up drugs for good

In 2003, he met his current wife, producer Susan Levin. Downey Jr credits her with his remarkable turnaround as she insisted she would never marry him unless he gave up drugs for good

Downey Jr also starred as Sherlock Holmes across from Jude Law in another popular franchise

Downey Jr also starred as Sherlock Holmes across from Jude Law in another popular franchise
Robert Downey Jr. talks about turning 50-years-old
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In suitably dramatic fashion, he stopped outside a roadside Burger King and threw all his drugs into the Pacific Ocean. He entered a 12-step programme to tackle his addictions, took up meditation and describes beating his addictions as coming out of a ‘20-year coma’. Downey Jr insists he hasn’t touched powerful stimulants ever since.

His career started to recover within months of his pledge to give up drugs and he is now apparently a devoted family man, taking Susan and their young son Exton and daughter Avri with him as travels the globe.

Downey Jr’s £51million earnings are considerably higher than the actor ranked second, Hong Kong-born martial arts star Jackie Chan, who pulled in £32million from his action films. In third place was Vin Diesel who earned £30million thanks to the success of the Fast and The Furious franchise.

Bradley Cooper, who is currently starring on the London stage in Elephant Man, was fourth with a £26million haul from roles in films such as American Sniper, while comedian Adam Sandler was in fifth with £25million.

Rounding out the top ten were Tom Cruise in sixth on £24million, Bollywood stars Amitabh Bachchan and Salman Khan rank at joint seventh with £21million and Akshay Kumar was ninth on £20.8million.

Mark Wahlberg was tenth with £20.5million. Daniel Craig was the only British actor on the list and came in 15th after earning £17million from the James Bond films.


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