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

Viggo’s hard ‘Road’ to hoe

Viggo Mortensen (Associated Press)
Rick Bentley The Fresno Bee

There’s no real secret as to how Viggo Mortensen prepared for the role of the half-starved character known as Man in “The Road.”

To lose weight, he just stopped eating as much as normal. The 51-year-old estimates he lost about 30 pounds that way.

And to better understand what it would be like for a man to be on a trek with his son across a barren post-apocalyptic world, the Oscar-nominated actor just thought of his own son.

“Throughout the movie I would think, ‘My son did something like that once,’ after something that (co-star) Kodi (Smit-McPhee) did,” says Mortensen, a part-time Sandpoint-area resident.

He found himself having fatherly concerns about his young co-star, particularly because of the harsh filming conditions. Most of the movie was shot during the winter in rural Pennsylvania to simulate a world that has gone through such a huge climatic change all life has died.

“If we hadn’t shot outside in the winter I don’t think it would have been as good a movie because no matter how well you fake it visually, the actors aren’t going to feel the same,” he says. “Even Kodi said it was a lot easier to be cold than pretend to be cold.

“It also affected our relationship because I felt naturally extra-protective of him … Here’s this skinny little kid from southern Australia who had never even seen snow.”

Mortensen’s tough physical roles in “Hildago” and the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy helped him handle that part of “The Road.”

The most draining part was how the character had to be so emotionally naked.

Even the film locations tested his emotions. Some of the scenes of desolate towns were shot in areas of New Orleans not rebuilt since Hurricane Katrina.

Mortensen was attracted to “The Road,” based on Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, because of what it says about humanity.

“I like the idea of getting to a point where you stop making excuses, not doing the right thing. That’s what the movie is about,” he says.

“Man learns from what happens to them, but mainly from the boy, about forgiving oneself, about forgiving others and realizing no matter how bad things are, something good could happen.

“And it doesn’t matter how many excuses you have for behaving in an unkind manner toward others, there’s never any excuse for not being kind.”

The birthday bunch

Actor John Hillerman (“Magnum P.I.”) is 77. Drummer Peter Criss (Kiss) is 64. Musician Alan Parsons is 61. Actor Michael Badalucco (“The Practice”) is 55. Singer Billy Bragg is 52. Singer Chris Robinson (Black Crowes) is 43. Singer David Cook (“American Idol”) is 27. Actor Jonah Hill is 26. Singer JoJo is 19.