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On March 19, 1993, a week and a half before his death, The Crow's Brandon Lee met with interviewer Ira Teller on the film's Wilmington, N.C., abandoned- warehouse set, where his character, Eric, wages his first open confrontation against those responsible for his murder and that of the woman he loved. The actor's videotaped comments were originally intended as part of the electronic publicity material that would go out to television stations to promote the film. Here, for the first time, are excerpts from that interview, which begins with Lee talking about his attraction to the role.
LEE: When I first met with Alex
Proyas, the director, one of the things that he talked about was wanting to see
the film through Eric Draven's eyes. You're dealing with...a man who has come
back from the dead, and I think the thing that I enjoy most about this is the
questions that raises. If you died, and a year had passed since you died, you
have to assume that the people you loved and the people who loved you would have
had to come to terms with having lost you. And now suddenly you are given the
chance to come back for two days.... Wouldn't you feel a responsibility not to
trammel in the lives of the people who have had a year to deal with that loss?
And you would see the world from a perspective no one has.... That's one of the
wonderful things about playing this character-there are no rules about how a
person who has come back from the dead is going to behave. There's this
wonderful quote from
TELLER:
LEE: It's extreme. The character
comes back from the dead, and, at first he doesn't know where he is, how he got
there.... How does that tie in with the physicality? I just didn't think he
should be too healthy-looking, so I lost some weight for the role. I've been
colder on this film than I've been in years; I can never remember deliberately
going outside when it was about 5 degrees, in the rain, with no shoes on. I
think it adds to the character's experience--I mean, he's torn up emotionally,
physically, and psychically, and the fact that there have been some stringent
physical demands placed on me
TELLER: There's a great deal of
action in the film. How did you approach the fights in this picture?
LEE: I must say I've never done
anything where I felt that the violence was as justified as it is in this
TELLER: There's a unique look to
Eric-his dress, his makeup, his conversational style. Could you talk about
that?
LEE: If you've ever found yourself
pushed to the limits of your tolerance... you find yourself doing some things
that, from the outside, can be seen as quite insane.... The makeup Eric ends up
putting on when he assumes this persona of the Crow is his reaction to being
pushed to those limits. He cannot deal with what is going on, and by assuming
this persona he creates someone who can.
TELLER: What is his
reward?
LEE: His reward is that he is
promised that he will be with Shelley, the woman he loved, in a better place.
That's interesting because that falls into
TELLER: There's a wicked, dark sense
of humor in this film.
LEE: You're dealing with a character
who is, at some points, quite insane. And I hope that any wicked, dark sense of
humor Eric exhibits comes out of the fact that he'd been pushed to the point
where it seems quite sensible to say some of the ridiculous things he says. God
knows the times I have found myself in absurd situations.... I had this guy
break into my house about four years ago, and I caught him in the middle of
robbing me. I jumped in through the window...and put him on the ground. When the
cops came, the fight had progressed out the window, onto the sidewalk. He had a
knife I had taken away from him, and I pressed
TELLER: Destiny plays a very
important role in the film. Characters are linked by events past. What about the
destiny of Brandon Lee?
LEE: Oh, now we're gonna talk about
me, huh? Well, I'm freezing to death; it's cold in here! Was I destined to play
this role? I don't know if I was destined to play this role, but I feel very
fortunate to be doing so.