Scott Feinberg’s 90-minute interview with Harrison Ford is interesting, substantive, good-natured. Definitely worth a listen.
But Ford speaks too softly (I was wearing my best headphones with the sound turned all the way up so don’t tell me), and it kinda makes me sad that he no longer sounds like Philadelphia detective John Book or Clear and Present Danger‘s Jack Ryan or even the aging Indiana Jones in Steven Spielberg‘s disappointing Crystal Skull, which came out 18 years ago.
The smooth depth and manly assurance of Ford’s movie-star voice has evaporated. Breaks my heart.
THR/Feinberg boilerplate: Over the course of a 90-minute conversation at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, the 83-year-old Harrison Ford reflected on how depression during college led him to acting; the fateful events that resulted in him moving to Hollywood, becoming a contract player at the tail-end of the studio system, and landing his life-changing role in Star Wars; why he quickly developed a desire to escape being a “leading man” and to instead play “character parts,” and what he made of the opportunity to do so in projects such as The Mosquito Coast, 42 and Shrinking; what it is about Shrinking that he finds so challenging and rewarding; how he feels about the future of moviegoing; plus much more.”
You know going in that Feinberg will never ask tough or provocative questions — his THR brand is about tossing softballs. You know he won’t ask Ford if he has any regrets about passing on Steven Soderbergh‘s Traffic. You know he won’t ask Ford to repeat the omelette story that included Calista Flockhart, Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore. You know he won’t ask Ford if he still regularly tokes up, and if he’s as much of a “head” now as he was in the ’80s, ’90s and aughts.
I don’t understand why the “Awards Chatter” coding insists on producing that big blank space below. I can’t figure a way to eliminate it.









