George Clooney on why ‘The Midnight Sky’ is his first film in 4 years
The new sci-fi drama The Midnight Sky marks George Clooneyâs first film in four years â since 2016âs Money Monster â but itâs not like the famed actor-director hasnât been busy.
He did star in and direct Huluâs miniseries Catch-22 a year ago, but the typically tireless performer now has a family he wants to be with, on top of his ongoing humanitarian efforts with the Clooney Foundation for Justice, which he co-founded with wife Amal Clooney.
âI was working on other things â Amal and I have a foundation that I work on, we try to chase down war criminals and that kind of thing,â Clooney tells Yahoo Entertainment during a recent virtual press event for The Midnight Sky, which he also directed (watch above). âI also have twins, quite honestly. Iâve been spending a lot of time with them.â [Clooneyâs twins Ella and Alexander were born in 2017.]
âAnd it takes a while to get things done. Iâve been working, but I havenât been acting so much,â he continues. âBut this was also a really good part for me.â
In the post-apocalyptic film, Clooney stars as scientist in the Arctic Circle who desperately attempts to warn returning astronauts that a catastrophic event has made Earth no longer inhabitable.
Being a family man now means that Clooney, 59, must take into account the opinions of his wife and kids, like when it came to the scraggly white beard he grew over four months for the role.
âMy wife was really, really ready for it to come off,â he says. âMy daughter was ready for it to come off. My son loved it. Because he would hide things in it, like a toy car. Literally Iâd get to work [and pull things out of my beard]. Like a popsicle stick in my beard.â
His co-stars werenât necessarily fans. âIt was horrifying,â cracks Kyle Chandler, while Felicity Jones seemed mildly creeped out that Clooney kept the beard strung up in the productionâs makeup trailer after he shaved it off.
Clooney has long been socially and politically active, so the thrillerâs eco-cautionary tale is hardly surprising. But itâs also a story thatâs become more prescient in the age of the coronavirus, as a lone survivor â until he meets a young stowaway (Caoilinn Springall) â who relies on technology to try to communicate with the spacecraft, potentially with the fate of humanity at stake.
âWhen we were pitching it to Netflix I said this is about this divisiveness and hate and anger that weâre seeing all over the world,â Clooney says. âAnd how we could end up killing ourselves along the way.
âWe wrapped shooting in February and then COVID came and we were all shut down and unable to communicate with one another and be close to one another. And so bit by bit it became really clear, and we focused on it while editing. Itâs really a story about our inability to be home and to be close to people and to communicate, and suddenly that became the part that we leaned into about the story.â
The Midnight Sky premieres Wednesday, Dec. 23 on Netflix.
Watch Clooney talk about his hopes for President-elect Joe Biden:
â Videos produced by Jon San and edited by John Santo
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