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Off Camera with Sam Jones

Ep 46. Joseph Gordon-Levitt

Off Camera with Sam Jones

offcamera

Arts, Education, Off Camera, Tv & Film

4.81.6K Ratings

🗓️ 29 October 2020

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One of best ways to enter and appreciate the original, prolific brain of Joseph Gordon-Levitt is through the lens of hitRECord, the open, collaborative production company he founded in 2005, and one of the most creative and inspiring uses of the Internet ever. Its nearly 100,000 members submit projects – films, stories, songs, drawings, you name it – for other members to edit, build on and evolve. Gordon-Levitt credits directing short films on hitRECord with teaching him what he needed to know to make Don Jon, his first feature film as a writer, director and star. It was a darkly comic but ultimately hopeful tale about what happens when we become too connected to our devices, consuming people as things and communicating at versus with each other. His effort was rewarded with critical acclaim rare for actors who have the audacity to become auteurs; more importantly, audiences dug it. A lot of artists might find hitting it out of the park on their first time at bat daunting, but it just made him want to do more, and on a more collaborative level. That’s because Gordon-Levitt has never been fond of one-way streets – not for communication, not for critiques, not for creating, and especially not for careers. He could’ve ambled down his own pretty easy and lucrative path after early childhood success in commercials, films and most famously, NBC’s hit sitcom 3rd Rock from the Sun. Instead, he went to Columbia University, largely out of a desire to reclaim the feeling of “not knowing what I was going to be” – an open question for many college freshmen, but few actors who’ve worked steadily from the age of four. When he found himself roaming the streets of New York with a video camera, he knew a return to acting was inevitable, but he knew it would have to be in unexpected roles – not to make an artistic statement, but to prove to the business (and himself) that he didn’t have to be just one thing. When such roles weren’t immediately forthcoming, his restless creativity found an outlet in hitRECord. The roles he was seeking eventually surfaced in films like 500 Days of Summer, Brick, Inception and Mysterious Skin; and hitRECord projects began to take on momentum. Good times for someone who “gets off on the stuff I never anticipated would happen.” He believes we should welcome versus dread the unexpected, that change is the most natural state, that good becomes great when we all participate and, as poignantly demonstrated by his late brother Dan, that “people can be whatever the hell they want to be.” All of which posits that the best artists are collaborators, and the best collaborators tend to have a stubborn optimistic streak. Maybe it’s that enthusiasm (and a certain degree of DIY showmanship) that invests his performance as funambulist Philippe Petit in Robert Zemekis’ The Walk with such verve and authenticity. That, and his superior make-believe skills – a blank green screen is no match for a fertile imagination. In this issue, we talk to him about that film, the role of technology in modern life, what he’s learned from being on both sides of the camera, and his hopes for future of hitRECord. For those still unclear on that concept, tune in to our broadcast episode for Gordon-Levitt’s demonstration – and the musical results. Thanks, well,…everyone.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and in this episode I sit down with actor, writer, producer, and well let's just call him colloquy.

0:07.0

I'm your host Sam Jones, and in this episode I sit down with actor, writer, producer, and, well, let's just call him collaborator-in-chief,

0:16.0

Joseph Gordon Levitt. I like to think of myself as a guy with a lot of interests and projects,

0:21.6

but Joe Gordon Levitt has me beat by a long mile. interests and acclaimed film Don John. He also plays music and as you're about to find out in this show he's pretty good.

0:36.1

But what intrigues me most is Hit Record, the production company he founded in 2005.

0:41.8

An artistic platform as unique as

0:44.1

hit record could only have been dreamed up by a guy as restless and

0:47.9

creative as Joe. In our conversation we cover why he pressed pause on an early acting career for the chance to go to Columbia University,

0:56.0

the role of technology in modern life, and his criteria for choosing film roles.

1:01.0

I also see if he'll fall for my clever ploy to get some background

1:04.1

music for this episode of off-camera. So pull up a chair and listen in.

1:11.6

Hey Joe. Hello Sam. How you doing? I'm well thanks man. Thanks for having here. Of course I'm I

1:17.6

tried to have you here for like two years and I think that you know finding the right time and

1:22.1

there couldn't be a better time

1:23.3

than this because you have so much going on but we've worked together for a long

1:27.5

time I remember you telling me about this idea I don't remember how many years ago we were

1:32.0

doing some photo shoot for something.

1:34.0

That's right. I want to do a thing that's you know where we get to have conversations and it looks really nice and photographed well

1:41.0

but there's some more substance to it than just the look and I was like well that sounds like a cool idea

1:45.1

It's so cool you actually I know it's great. Well, thank you. Yeah, you know

1:50.1

I you came to my attention really I was never a sitcom watcher but why not?

1:56.2

Well I think when you were on a sitcom I was in my skateboard for five hours a day and play

...

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