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Rascally
Brit Tom Hardy charms as a gay hooligan in Guy Ritchie's new gangster
flick.
The
day he watched Madonna jab a needle into Gerard Butler’s bare
ass, Tom Hardy realized the pop legend meant business. The 31-year-old
British actor had been sitting on the side of the road in a Range
Rover, preparing for a scene with Butler for Guy Ritchie’s
new gangster tale, RocknRolla, when Madonna showed up to
administer an injection of vitamin B12 to the 300 star,
who was ill at the time. “It was her basically saying, ‘Gerard,
I don’t want you fucking up my husband’s film,’?”
Hardy says, chuckling. “There she is in the back of the car,
slipping in from the roof, and appearing like the Terminator --
the fucking Madonna.”
Despite
her interruption (Madonna does not appear in the film), Hardy was
able to pull himself together for the scene, a key moment in RocknRolla
when his character, Handsome Bob, confesses to his close friend
One Two (Butler) that he is in love with him. It’s a rather
awkward exchange. Though the rest of their crooked clan suspects
Handsome Bob is gay, One Two is shocked. The tension between the
two sticks around for the remainder of the film, a nice homoerotic
touch from Ritchie, known for his violent, testosterone-fueled capers.
According to Hardy, Handsome Bob is based on an actual gay gangster.
“But the real guy sounded a lot tougher than Handsome Bob,”
he explains. “Bob is the getaway driver -- a lad, as opposed
to a mobster or killer. He’s just one of the boys.”
Hardy,
whose wide-ranging performances have earned him comparisons to Ewan
McGregor, can certainly relate to Handsome Bob’s delinquent
tendencies. The heavily tattooed former model and recovering drug
addict says he was “a profound reprobate” from an early
age. (As a teen he was pulled over in a stolen Mercedes with a firearm
in his possession.) But Hardy -- who also had roles in Marie
Antoinette and Black Hawk Down and starred as Capt.
Jean-Luc Picard’s evil clone in 2002’s Star Trek:
Nemesis -- admits that men intimidate him. “Masculine,
butch groups of blokes together -- it’s never really been
my cup of tea. Playing a gay man in a Guy Ritchie movie is a finger
up to that whole attitude of men talking about men doing men’s
things, which is so fucking narrow-minded. Handsome Bob is what
a man should be -- except for the part of him taking a crowbar to
the back of someone’s head.”
Yet
it is RocknRolla’s men-behaving-very-badly scenarios
that infuse the flick with a high dose of queerness. In Ritchie’s
louche criminal underworld, Handsome Bob and One Two are chased
by two teeth-gnashing Russian thugs, one of whom ends up shirtless,
his chiseled abs covered in sweat and blood. Several scenes later,
when the mobsters pay a surprise visit to One Two’s house,
sporting S/M-style leather gear to bind and gag him in his bedroom,
it’s not clear whether they want to kill him or screw him.
That’s
not to say the film -- a slick blend of sex, drugs, and rock ’n’
roll -- doesn’t have its gentler moments. At one point One
Two even finds himself embracing Handsome Bob, surrounded by a pack
of swishy dancers at a salsa club. “During our lessons these
really gay dancers were trying to put it on Butler,” says
Hardy. “They just made me want to snuggle Gerard a bit tighter,
lick his top lip a bit.”
RocknRolla
is in theaters nationwide October 31.
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