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WING MEN LEONARDO DICAPRIO AND MARTIN SCORSESE MUSTERED HOWARD HUGHES-LIKE INTENSITY TO GET 'THE AVIATOR' OFF THE GROUND.


Byline: Bob Strauss Film Writer

After going massively over schedule and budget on their last film together, the epic ``Gangs of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
,'' actor Leonardo DiCaprio Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio (born November 11 1974[1]) is a three-time Academy Award-nominated and Golden Globe Award-winning American actor who garnered world wide fame for his role as Jack Dawson in Titanic.  and director Martin Scorsese Noun 1. Martin Scorsese - United States filmmaker (born in 1942)
Scorsese
 did not choose to make anything easier for themselves.

Their second collaboration, the Howard Hughes biopic bi·o·pic  
n.
A film or television biography, often with fictionalized episodes.


biopic
Noun

Informal a film based on the life of a famous person [bio(graphical) + pic(ture)]
 ``The Aviator,'' is arguably even more ambitious and complicated than the 1860s Manhattan epic. Focusing on a period from the late 1920s to the mid-1940s, when the young Texas millionaire made his name as a maverick moviemaker mov·ie·mak·er  
n.
One that makes movies, especially professionally.



movie·mak
, record-breaking pilot and airplane entrepreneur, celebrity ladies man and the country's first billionaire, the project was clearly top-heavy with production challenges.

And acting hurdles, too, as, since everybody knows, Hughes suffered from an undiagnosed obsessive compulsive disorder Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)
Disorder characterized by persistent, intrusive, and senseless thoughts (obsessions) or compulsions to perform repetitive behaviors that interfere with normal functioning.

Mentioned in: Tourette Syndrome
 that turned him into a germophobic recluse during the last bizarre years of his life. ``The Aviator's'' script, credited to John Logan John Logan or Johnny Logan is a name shared amongst the following:
  • John Alexander Logan, a 19th century American soldier and political leader
  • John Alexander Logan, Jr, a United States Army officer posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions leading a
 (``Gladiator''), charts the growing disruption the disease brought to Hughes' otherwise high-function life.

``The biggest challenge for me was, what Howard Hughes did we want to portray?'' says 30-year-old DiCaprio, who has been developing the Hughes project for eight years, bringing it to Scorsese after Michael Mann Michael Mann is the name of:
  • Michael Mann (film director) (born 1943)
  • Michael Mann (scientist), climate researcher.
  • Michael Mann (politician), Federal Marijuana Party candidate in Canada.
 declined to direct a third biopic following ``The Insider'' and ``Ali.'' ``There were so many different periods in his life that you could put up on screen. There were so many different sides of him.

``You could do older Howard, younger Howard, the playboy Howard, the aviator Howard, the producer Howard and all the different facets of the man himself,'' says DiCaprio, whose research included conversations with former Hughes business associates and with the likes of Jane Russell Jane Russell (born June 21, 1921) is an American actress and sex symbol. Early life
Born Ernestine Jane Geraldine Russell in Bemidji, Minnesota, she was the only daughter of Roy William Russell (January 5, 1890 – July 18, 1937) and Geraldine Jacobi (January
, star of his cleavage-centric Western ``The Outlaw,'' and actress Terry Moore, whose claim to have secretly married Hughes was eventually honored by the mogul's estate.

``The only reason I believe that this movie got made was because we had, at its center, a character that had everything in the world but throughout all of that was dealing with the onset of mental illness, as opposed to the aftermath.''

To get it right, however, DiCaprio had to delve into his own study of OCD OCD obsessive-compulsive disorder.

OCD
abbr.
obsessive-compulsive disorder


Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) 
. No stranger to madness himself - both the public kind he experienced after ``Titanic'' made him a worldwide love god or the genius kind such directors as Scorsese and James Cameron

For other people named James Cameron, see James Cameron (disambiguation).


James Francis Cameron (born August 16, 1954) is an Academy Award winning Canadian director, producer and screenwriter.
 sometimes exhibit - he read every book he could on the subject.

But as with Hughes, that was just the start of DiCaprio's research.

``Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz at UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
 taught me about OCD, and I got to spend three or four days with a patient,'' the actor explains. ``I found out what a daily routine for them was like and how you're constantly playing mind games with yourself.

``That screening-room sequence, the most frightening and daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 thing about it was that here you have this man who was, certainly, a technical genius,'' DiCaprio says of a scene in which Hughes holes up in an RKO RKO Radio Keith Orpheum (movie studio)
RKO Randy Keith Orton (wrestling)
RKO Relativistic Klystron Oscillator
RKO Rural King Ohio (farm supply store) 
 viewing chamber for weeks. ``And he takes all that obsession and brainpower brain·pow·er  
n.
1. Intellectual capacity.

2. People of well-developed mental abilities: a country that doesn't value its brainpower.

Noun 1.
 and energy and focuses it on how his soup cans are to be opened and makes memos that last for hours and hours about how his lunch is to be delivered.''

As for dealing with the kind of publicity that helped drive Hughes deeper into insanity, DiCaprio explains that he's learned reclusiveness re·clu·sive  
adj.
1. Seeking or preferring seclusion or isolation.

2. Providing seclusion: a reclusive hut.
 is not the way to go. ``There was a conscious effort on my part during that period in my life to get away from my own image,'' the actor admits. ``But I had a rebellious attitude about it; I wasn't going to not go anywhere or not experience life or not do anything that I wanted to do because of that media attention.

``And people go through things in life that are phenomenally more traumatic than having people recognize you or take pictures of you. People often wonder how somebody who is famous deals with it. It's human nature to adapt to your environment and circumstances.''

Except for people who can buy their own overprotected environment, as Hughes ultimately did.

For Scorsese, who acknowledges that his own movie madness and obsession with details have led to Hughes comparisons in the past, one of the ready-made project's most seductive elements was its classic Hollywood setting. He exulted as much in casting Hughes' on- and off-screen leading ladies - Cate Blanchett does a bravura bra·vu·ra  
n.
1. Music
a. Brilliant technique or style in performance.

b. A piece or passage that emphasizes a performer's virtuosity.

2. A showy manner or display.

adj.
1.
 Katharine Hepburn, Kate Beckinsale gets Ava Gardner's sexy tough love down to a kind of science, and No Doubt rocker Gwen Stefani embodies platinum princess Jean Harlow - as he did in re-creating the four-year (!) production of Hughes' dogfight classic, ``Hell's Angels.''

There are also several key scenes set in a lavishly re-created Cocoanut Grove nightclub, a nail-biting staging of the Beverly Hills test-plane crash that almost killed Hughes, the climactic lone flight of the ``unflyable'' Spruce Goose in Long Beach Harbor and subtle digital approximating of the bright, slightly off hues of early two-strip Technicolor and the saturated lushness of the three-strip process that replaced it.

``I really am fascinated by color,'' Scorsese, 62, recalls. ``When I was a kid, the movie theater was my refuge. And many of the films I saw were two- or three-strip Technicolor. Basically, I took the two-color thing all the way up to 1936, which is when three-strip Technicolor came in. To me, it was like the sense memory of that time. I imagined that world that way, especially Hollywood.''

Massive as the whole project was, DiCaprio reports that there's a reason why actors clamor to work with Scorsese.

``It's going to sound like a cliche, but I cannot tell a lie,'' DiCaprio says. ``He is every actor's dream to work with because he is not only one of the greatest filmmakers of all time, but he is a professor of film. You get an education while working with him every single day. He screens movies for you, talks about specific scenes and what he's trying to convey up on screen. You can ask him a question about a character or the way a scene should go, and he can show you 20 different examples of the way it's been done right and the way it's been done wrong.

``And for us, despite having this huge generation gap, we've discovered that we share the same tastes in a lot of different things. We have a great work ethic together, and we get along.''

Evidently. Scorsese and DiCaprio both confirm that their next project will be ``The Departed,'' a saga of police and criminal moles based on the Hong Kong ``Infernal Affairs'' trilogy.

``Yeah, I'd love to work with a lot of different directors out there,'' DiCaprio says with a laugh. ``This happened to be one of those coincidences where we were attracted to the same material, and there was an around-30-year-old white male lead in the movie.''

Just as big a question: Will ``Departed'' be produced on a smaller scale than the last two Scorsese epics?

``Yes!'' the director says emphatically. And asked if he's gotten the big-picture bug out of his system, he wholeheartedly whole·heart·ed  
adj.
Marked by unconditional commitment, unstinting devotion, or unreserved enthusiasm: wholehearted approval.



whole
 sighs, ``I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
. I hope!'' He laughs, then stops. ``I hope, I hope.''

But Scorsese admits that his own Hughes-like grandiosity may have been his worst enemy - if not on this production, at least on the one before it.

``On time, pretty much on budget,'' he says of bringing in ``The Aviator.'' ``For 'Gangs of New York,' we had to re-create a whole world, none of which existed. Here in California, it wasn't that bad in terms of finding locations and dealing with extras. And the script to 'Gangs,' for me, was a project that never would have been finished. I kept changing the script and changing. I would still want to take the story up to building the Brooklyn Bridge.''

Bob Strauss, (818) 713-3670

bob.strauss(at)dailynews.com

CAPTION(S):

2 photos

Photo:

(1) Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes

(2 -- cover -- color) Hell's Angel

Leonardo DiCaprio had a devil of a time playing Howard Hughes in Martin Scorsese's `The Aviator'
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Dec 12, 2004
Words:1333
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