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James Franco plays against type in 'Pineapple'

By Chris Lee, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer|August 06, 2008
  • James Franco
    Spencer Weiner / Los Angeles Times

IN ""PINEAPPLE EXPRESS," he plays a visibly unwashed hippie pot dealer on the run from mobsters: a THC-addled naif with a crinkly smile, a curtain of lank, dark hair and a heart of gold. But don't get the wrong impression about James Franco just because of his spot-on performance in the most anticipated stoner action-comedy of the year. He's no dope, even though he smokes plenty on-screen.

To wit: Dude can almost carbon-date his experiences making certain movies by recalling what literature he was reading at the time.

In 2006, while filming the massive international blockbuster " Spider-Man 3," in which the actor plays Spidey's BFF turned arch nemesis the Green Goblin, Franco was deep into the classical canon of Shakespeare, Chaucer and Milton -- required reading for the UCLA creative writing degree he was pursuing at the time. "It took so long to set up the effects shots and get everything coordinated, it was perfect for doing homework," Franco said, chomping into a club sandwich at a Beverly Hills hotel.


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Portraying Sean Penn's love interest in "Milk," director Gus Van Sant's biopic about slain San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk earlier this year, Franco stole many an off-camera moment to plow through the works of Thomas Pynchon. "That was the craziest seminar I could ever imagine," said Franco. "It was 'Gravity's Rainbow,' 'Mason & Dixon,' 'V.' So I'd be reading that on the set and Sean would be like, 'What do you make of all that?'"

And while filming the Judd Apatow-produced "Pineapple Express" -- in which Franco's soulful, bromantic, type-shattering ď performance anchors both the pot humor and surreal violence -- it was all 16th century Jacobean drama all the time. "I can remember reading 'The Revenger's Tragedy' and 'Maid's Tragedy.' Stuff by Ben Jonson," Franco said. His costar in the film Danny McBride recalled being impressed with the actor's ability to juggle Hollywood and academia. "James just nailed it. He is hilarious," McBride said. "He was going to college full time while he was shooting the movie; he was in the makeup chair reading his homework. He would shoot nights and then go back to school the next morning."

Who knew? Here's a seemingly Serious Actor Type who devours serious books even while brooding and emoting in blockbusters and smaller indie fare alike. At least that's how it adds up, taken with Franco's recent work, as well as his self-contained performances in 2002's "City by the Sea" opposite Robert De Niro and in the TV movie " James Dean," a biopic for which Franco won a best performance Golden Globe for inhabiting the title role.

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