Joaquin Phoenix on being directed by Woody Allen, the importance of luck, and that Letterman interview
Phoenix, the star of Allen's latest movie Irrational Man, shows why he's the go-to guy for eccentric and messed-up characters
Joaquin Phoenix has just claimed his first victim of the day, or so it seems when an angry interviewer emerges from the actor's hotel room.
"How did it go?" asks the publicist coordinating media coverage of Woody Allen's new film, , in which Phoenix plays the lead role.
"How do you think it went?" snaps the interviewer, shoving his recorder and notepad into his satchel. "It's Joaquin Phoenix."
Phoenix, 40, is never easy - in person or on screen. The same reticent and enigmatic behaviour that makes him look like a hostage on the red carpet renders him a natural for the messed-up, hard-to-play roles that would flatten most of his Hollywood peers.
Minutes after irritating his previous interviewer, Phoenix welcomes me with a big, overzealous hug. It's a standard greeting in Hollywood, yet unnerving coming from him. "You haven't changed a day," he effuses, referring to our last interview more than 15 years ago.
Did I mention he's unpredictable?