Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    SHOOTonline SHOOTonline SHOOTonline
    Register
    • Home
    • News
      • MySHOOT
      • Articles | Series
        • Best work
        • Chat Room
        • Director Profiles
        • Features
        • News Briefs
        • “The Road To Emmy”
        • “The Road To Oscar”
        • Top Spot
        • Top Ten Music Charts
        • Top Ten VFX Charts
      • Columns | Departments
        • Earwitness
        • Hot Locations
        • Legalease
        • People on the Move
        • POV (Perspective)
        • Rep Reports
        • Short Takes
        • Spot.com.mentary
        • Street Talk
        • Tool Box
        • Flashback
      • Screenwork
        • MySHOOT
        • Most Recent
        • Featured
        • Top Spot of the Week
        • Best Work You May Never See
        • New Directors Showcase
      • SPW Publicity News
        • SPW Release
        • SPW Videos
        • SPW Categories
        • Event Calendar
        • About SPW
      • Subscribe
    • Screenwork
      • Attend NDS2024
      • MySHOOT
      • Most Recent
      • Most Viewed
      • New Directors Showcase
      • Best work
      • Top spots
    • Trending
    • NDS2024
      • NDS Web Reel & Honorees
      • Become NDS Sponsor
      • ENTER WORK
      • ATTEND
    • PROMOTE
      • ADVERTISE
        • ALL AD OPTIONS
        • SITE BANNERS
        • NEWSLETTERS
        • MAGAZINE
        • CUSTOM E-BLASTS
      • FYC
        • ACADEMY | GUILDS
        • EMMY SEASON
        • CUSTOM E-BLASTS
      • NDS SPONSORSHIP
    • Contact
    • Subscribe
      • Digital ePubs Only
      • PDF Back Issues
      • Log In
      • Register
    SHOOTonline SHOOTonline SHOOTonline
    Home » Christian Bale, Amy Adams Reflect On Becoming “Vice” Couple

    Christian Bale, Amy Adams Reflect On Becoming “Vice” Couple

    By SHOOTSunday, December 23, 2018Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments4115 Views
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    • Image 0
    • Image 1
    This image released by Annapurna Pictures shows Christian Bale as Dick Cheney, left, and Amy Adams as Lynne Cheney in a scene from "Vice." (Matt Kennedy/Annapurna Pictures via AP)

    By Lindsey Bahr, Film Writer

    BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) --

    Christian Bale had a choice to make. He'd been hemming and hawing about Adam McKay's very unconventional proposition that he play Dick Cheney in a biopic about the former vice president of the United States, and his deadline to decide was coming up.

    "I thought it was going to be impossible. I also didn't want to do that much work," Bale said recently in Beverly Hills. "I just thought, 'this is going to be a lot of work!' Like, 'Do you realize how difficult this is going to be? I don't really want to do that.'"

    But he started researching Cheney and doing some early makeup tests and realized he'd become obsessed. Suddenly seeing his name next to Cheney's didn't seem "so completely crazy." He had to say yes.

    Besides, he laughed, "There's always attraction, I feel like, in ending a career in one go."

    So Bale and, eventually, his frequent co-star Amy Adams ("The Fighter," ''American Hustle"), decided to do the impossible and become the enigmatic Dick and Lynne Cheney for McKay's "Vice." The charged polemic, which arrives in theaters Christmas day, follows the Cheneys from their inauspicious origins to Washington D.C., where Dick Cheney would became one of the most powerful and influential figures in the country.

    To Bale, Cheney was someone who thrived on serving someone, whether it be Donald Rumsfeld or George W. Bush, but that his first loyalty was to his wife. The film posits a Shakespearean power dynamic where Lynne is pulling strings behind the scenes.

    "Lynne was the ambition and the driving force," Bale said. "Times being as they were Lynne was not able to achieve all these goals that she wished she could achieve herself. She needed a man to do that and so Dick became that vessel through which she achieved her own ambitions."

    Adams too became fascinated by her character's initiative and intelligence, and realized she needed to stop thinking of her as merely "Dick Cheney's wife."

    "My daughter asked me what I was going to play, and I said, 'I'm playing Dick Cheney's wife. And she was like, 'Why are you always playing a wife and a girlfriend?' And I realized even I had assigned her a position that was in relationship to Dick Cheney and it changed the way that I view her," Adams said. "I was like you know what, 'No I'm playing Lynne Cheney. She's married to Dick Cheney. She is his wife, but she has her own identity.'"

    Neither met their real-life subject, who they would be portraying over the course of four decades. Bale wanted to but was "warned away from trying to do that."

    "It's one of those deals where they say if you bump into somebody, well good, chat all you want, but if you reach out to somebody, it's a different legal thing that happens with that," he said.

    But they had a lot of resources to help, including first-hand accounts from people who knew them, and the internet. Bale's phone is still full of videos and photos of Cheney, right alongside those of his wife and kids.

    "I haven't been able to get rid of it yet," said Bale, laughing that he's become fond of the memories.

    Of course, learning about Dick and Lynne Cheney is one thing, but Bale and Adams would also have to look like them as well for "Vice" to work. For Bale, that meant yet another significant physical transformation that involved wearing fake teeth, gaining some 40 pounds, adding "a couple of inches" to his neck and spending about four hours in the makeup chair every day.

    "It helps me get into character, but it doesn't help me live a long life. Really. I've really got to stop doing it at some point," Bale said.

    He used to laugh at people who would just opt for an easy fat suit, instead of doing the work, until he realized that Gary Oldman had done just that for his Oscar-winning Winston Churchill transformation for "Darkest Hour." But at that point he had already gained 25 pounds and decided he might as well just keep going. Adams, too gained some weight.

    "I found it helpful for just the gravitas that Lynne had," Adams said. "She felt very earthy to me."

    One thing Adams struggled with was the long hours in the makeup chair.

    "One day I was so tired, I felt like I was on a boat and I was sitting there and we were working late into the night and I said, 'I don't know how you do it, Christian, I really have so much admiration for you,' and he was just like, 'I don't think about it,'" she said. "It's exactly what I needed to hear in that moment."

    Although the film itself may be political, both Bale and Adams would rather stay out of commenting on or making judgments about their characters and their politics.

    "I didn't approach this with my own opinions. I don't typically head into any character I approach by judging them," Adams said. "That kind of shuts me down in creating the character."

    Bale added: "If you're watching us on the screen and you know Amy's political stance on what Lynne was saying and my opinion and how much I disagree or agree with…it really kind of ruins the whole point."

    And perhaps the story is more complicated than party lines. Bale said, when you remove the "enormously horrific things," like the Iraq War and enhanced interrogation, you are, "Kind of left with a love story."

    "You get this incredibly devoted man who recognizes that he would not have been the person he became were it not for his wife. You get a man who contrary to the times and what was popular with his party, without any hesitation, embraced his daughter Mary when she came out. He didn't give a damn what anybody else thought. But I think also that is largely a part of what makes this story, and any story interesting," Bale said. "There is this desire so often to make everyone into superheroes, to be all villain or all hero and nobody is … So it's trying to find that balance but hopefully not putting anything of myself into it."

    "Does that make sense?" Bale added, "Or does it sound REALLY pretentious?"

    REGISTRATION REQUIRED to access this page.

    Already registered? LOGIN
    Don't have an account? REGISTER

    Registration is FREE and FAST.

    The limited access duration has come to an end. (Access was allowed until: 2018-12-25)
    Category:News
    Tags:Adam McKayAmy AdamsChristian BaleVICE



    Robert Duvall, “Godfather” Mainstay and Oscar-Winning Actor For “Tender Mercies,” Dies At 95

    Monday, February 16, 2026

    Robert Duvall, the Oscar-winning actor of matchless versatility and dedication whose classic roles included the intrepid consigliere of the first two "Godfather" movies and the over-the-hill country music singer in "Tender Mercies," has died at age 95. Duvall died "peacefully" at his home Sunday in Middleburg, Virginia, according to an announcement from his publicist and from a statement posted on his Facebook page by his wife, Luciana Duvall. "To the world, he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller. To me, he was simply everything," Luciana Duvall wrote. "His passion for his craft was matched only by his deep love for characters, a great meal, and holding court. For each of his many roles, Bob gave everything to his characters and to the truth of the human spirit they represented." The bald, wiry Duvall didn't have leading man looks, but few "character actors" enjoyed such a long, rewarding and unpredictable career, in leading and supporting roles, from an itinerant preacher to Josef Stalin. Beginning with his 1962 film debut as Boo Radley, the reclusive neighbor in "To Kill a Mockingbird," Duvall created a gallery of unforgettable portrayals. They earned him seven Academy Award nominations and the best actor prize for "Tender Mercies," which came out in 1983. He also won four Golden Globes, including one for playing the philosophical cattle-drive boss in the 1989 miniseries "Lonesome Dove," a role he often cited as his favorite. In 2005, Duvall was awarded a National Medal of Arts. He had been acting for some 20 years when "The Godfather," released in 1972, established him as one of the most in-demand performers of Hollywood. He had made a previous film, "The Rain People," with Francis Coppola, and the director chose him to... Read More

    No More Posts Found

    MySHOOT Profiles

    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Previous ArticleReview: Director Karyn Kusama’s “Destroyer”
    Next Article Street Talk for December 28, 2018
    SHOOT

    Add A Comment
    What's Hot

    Master Documentarian Frederick Wiseman, An Honorary Oscar Winner, Dies At 96

    Monday, February 16, 2026

    Robert Duvall, “Godfather” Mainstay and Oscar-Winning Actor For “Tender Mercies,” Dies At 95

    Monday, February 16, 2026

    Heard City’s Gloria Pitagorsky Named 2026 AICP Post Awards Chairperson

    Monday, February 16, 2026
    Shoot Screenwork

    Framestore Pictures’ Director Rich Lee Brings Human Touch To Trailer For Resident Evil: Requiem

    Monday, February 16, 2026

    Director Rich Lee of Framestore Pictures has partnered with Capcom and Nomadic Agency to create…

    Blinkink Crafts A Baroque Stop-Motion Trip To The Moon For Dior

    Friday, February 13, 2026

    Top Spot of the Week: Cinematic Short From Greenpeace and ELVIS Treats Death Not As The End Of Activism But The Sequel

    Thursday, February 12, 2026

    The Best Work You May Never See: Travel Oregon, W+K Portland, Director Janssen Powers Unveil A State of Contrast

    Wednesday, February 11, 2026

    The Trusted Source For News, Information, Industry Trends, New ScreenWork, and The People Behind the Work in Film, TV, Commercial, Entertainment Production & Post Since 1960.

    Today's Date: Fri May 26 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    More Info
    • Overview
    • Upcoming in SHOOT Magazine
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • SHOOT Copyright Notice
    • SPW Copyright Notice
    • Spam Policy
    • Terms of Service (TOS)
    • FAQ
    STAY CURRENT

    SUBSCRIBE TO SHOOT EPUBS

    © 1990-2021 DCA Business Media LLC. All rights reserved. SHOOT and SHOOTonline are registered trademarks of DCA Business Media LLC.
    • Home
    • Trending Now

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.