The actor, who gained fame on TV show
"3rd Rock From the Sun," portrays Gotham police officer John Blake in
Friday's "The Dark Knight Rises," the eagerly anticipated final
installment of director Christopher Nolan's "Batman" trilogy.
While details about the film plot have been
kept closely guarded, the actor told Reuters in a recent interview that fans
can expect "a really excellent movie and a real ending" for the trio
of Nolan's movies about the crime-fighting superhero.
"Sometimes they call something a
trilogy, and it's not really a trilogy, it's another sequel to make money. But
this really is a great ending, there's a beginning, a middle and an end,"
Gordon-Levitt said about Nolan's Batman movies.
Gordon-Levitt plays idealistic rookie cop
Blake who becomes Commissioner Gordon's protégé. As trouble is unleashed on
Gotham by the villain Bane, Blake becomes a key figure in joining Batman to save
the city.
Following "Dark Knight," fans see
Gordon-Levitt in several films over the next few months, including
adrenaline-laced thriller "Premium Rush" in August and opposite Bruce
Willis in sci-fi time travel thriller "Looper" in September, which
reunited him with "Brick" director Rian Johnson.
"(Rian) wrote the part for me, and
I've never had somebody write a part for me. That was an honor,"
Gordon-Levitt said.
In "Looper," both Gordon-Levitt
and Willis play the same mob hitman called Joe, hired to kill targets through
time travel. Gordon-Levitt took to the challenge of becoming Willis both
physically and mentally, watching the "Die Hard" star's old movies,
listening to his voice and spending time with him.
"My favorite part of acting is
becoming something other than myself, and most of my favorite actors are the
chameleons, the ones who disappear into their roles. You don't see the actor on
screen, you see the character," Gordon-Levitt said, citing Gary Oldman,
Meryl Streep and Daniel Day-Lewis as influences.
Director Johnson told Reuters that
Gordon-Levitt put in a lot of "legwork and heavy lifting" to research
and embody his characters thoroughly so that audiences don't feel like he is
simply putting up an imitation.
FROM "3RD ROCK" TO BLOCKBUSTERS
Gordon-Levitt, 31, a native of Los Angeles,
has spent most of his life in front of a camera, appearing on television
regularly since the early 1990s and landing a lead role on NBC's alien comedy
"3rd Rock" alongside John Lithgow.
The actor's transition to movies began with
a breakout role in 1999 teen comedy "10 Things I Hate About You."
Since then, he has worked non-stop across a variety of film genres, from 2004's
gritty, low-budget drama "Brick" to playing a hopeless romantic in
2009 romantic comedy "(500) Days Of Summer." He broke into
blockbusters with Stephen Sommers' "G.I. Joe: The Rise Of The Cobra"
in 2009, and in Nolan's "Inception" in 2010.
"The reason he's been successful at it
is that he applies the same criteria to big movies as he does to small movies,
he's not just looking to break in and hop on board the latest big franchise, he
chooses stories and filmmakers he's interested in," said Johnson, who is
close friends with the actor.
Gordon-Levitt's range is wide. He portrayed
a cancer sufferer in last year's comedy "50/50" and will be a bike
messenger in the upcoming "Premium Rush," as well as Abraham
Lincoln's son opposite Daniel Day-Lewis in Steven Spielberg's
"Lincoln."
"I have an eclectic taste in the
movies that I watch as well as the movies I'm inspired to want to work on.
Variety is what keeps things interesting," the actor said. "I do work
a whole lot and that's what I love to do, I'm very lucky to have a job that I
love and that's pretty much what I do with my time."
Gordon-Levitt makes his directorial debut
in "Don Jon's Addiction," exploring porn addiction, due in theaters
next year starring Scarlett Johansson and Julianne Moore.
He also is heavily involved with his
production company hitRECord, an online community of creative individuals who
work on projects, including "The Tiny Book Of Tiny Stories," with
volume 2 due out in November.
"There's plenty of people who don't
have access to participate in the traditional entertainment industry and are
great artists all the same, so hitRECord is a way for me to work with those
people," said the actor.
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