Gerard Butler weeps when he talks about ‘Machine Gun Preacher’

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When I saw the first trailer for Gerard Butler’s new film, Machine Gun Preacher, I was surprised by how interesting it looked. The thing about The Butler is… he usually makes bad movies. For every 300 and Dear Frankie, there are a half-dozen Law Abiding Citizens. It’s gotten to the point where my first instinct is to wince when I hear that Butler has a new movie. Maybe Gerard knew that he was making bad choices, or maybe he just happened to get a few good scripts, but it seems like Gerry might have made a couple of good movies this year, and Machine Gun Preacher is one of them. It’s not just the story that looks interesting (based on a true story, by the way), but Gerard actually appears to be… Acting. Like, he showing emotional depth and range. And he got a better American accent coach too:

Sigh… yes, it’s kind of melodramatic and there are moments of cheese, but… I still think that the fact that it’s a true story will help. Anyway, Gerard has begun to give interviews to support the film (which he also produced), and he’s still very emotional about the subject matter. Sidenote: I really like this version of Gerard.

Gerard Butler is crying.

It’s a sunny afternoon and the actor best known as King Leonidas in “300” had just sauntered into a Los Feliz eatery, fresh off his Harley, adorned in a black T-shirt, army green pants and a helmet tucked close to his newly trim body. He’s charmed the wait staff, ordered a salad along with his café latte so his guest won’t have to eat alone, and is affably sharing anecdotes. Yet the moment he revisits his time in South Africa, playing Sam Childers, the real-life gun-wielding preacher who went to the Sudan and started an orphanage, his emotions can’t be contained.

“This happened to me a lot when we were filming. I would just be overcome,” he says through tears. “I feel every emotion. I haven’t talked much about this movie in a while, and I did the other day, and I just started crying. I cried for about five minutes.”

This time Butler’s crying jag lasts a good two minutes.

“I don’t know how I’m going to get through this,” he says with a laugh while wiping his eyes as he ponders the exhaustive national media tour he’s about to embark on to promote his upcoming passion project “Machine Gun Preacher,” which opens Sept. 23.

Directed by Marc Forster (“Quantum of Solace”), “Preacher” forced Butler to examine his own demons as he embodied the violent, rageful Childers, a rural Pennsylvania native who transformed his drug-riddled, crime-filled life after finding God. Childers’ born-again experience led him to becoming a preacher in his hometown before traveling to Africa, where he came upon hundreds of children orphaned at the hands of the Lord’s Resistance Army, which was staging a violent campaign throughout Uganda, Sudan and the Congo. The atrocities propelled Childers to found an orphanage in Sudan in 1998 that now houses more than 200 children and feeds more than 1,000.

“A lot of the feelings I felt with Sam, the violence and the craziness, being out of control and not knowing how to live your life, I had all that,” says Butler, who remade himself as an actor after his unhappiness with his first career as a lawyer led him to use alcohol and drugs. “Did I go around stabbing people and shooting people? No. Did I end up in Africa building an orphanage? No. But I did have a massive transformation in my life where I sorted everything out.”

For Butler, who from July 2009 through March 2010 starred in what “could have been a career killer” five movies (including “The Ugly Truth” and “Law-Abiding Citizen”), the commitment to the part of Childers began a year before the cameras even started rolling. The 41-year-old Scot would sporadically meet with Forster and screenwriter Jason Keller for marathon sessions to deconstruct each scene. It’s clearly a movie that affects him deeply but also one that allows him to “gain some gravitas and weight as an actor,” he says.

It was also a unique experience for Keller to work so closely with a film’s star.

“I think it was a great responsibility for Gerry to play the role of a guy who is alive, a guy who is as dynamic as Sam with a story that’s so incredible,” says Keller. “During the sessions, and even when we were filming, I saw him going deeper and deeper [into the role]. It was an incredible burden [for him].”

[From The Los Angeles Times]

I joke (“joke”) about Gerard being a womanizer who never spends the night with the same woman twice (true story), but there is this other side to him. He has done quite a lot of work with Artists for Peace and Justice, and he has traveled to Haiti several times. I want to believe that Gerry has a big heart – or do you think this is just a put-on to promote his movie?

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Here are some new photos of Gerry from this past weekend. I like him in red-pink.

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Photos courtesy of Pacific Coast News, LAT and ‘MGP’ still.

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18 Responses to “Gerard Butler weeps when he talks about ‘Machine Gun Preacher’”

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  1. anait says:

    “I joke (“joke”) about Gerard being a womanizer who never spends the night with the same woman twice (true story), but there is this other side to him. He has done quite a lot of work with Artists for Peace and Justice, and he has traveled to Haiti several times. I want to believe that Gerry has a big heart – or do you think this is just a put-on to promote his movie?”

    @ Kaiser
    You don’t know him personally, I don’t know him personally and it is the same for most – if not all – the people who read blogs and gossip in general, so you can believe what you want. That’s the beauty of the thing… and that is why I’m not very fond about meeting celebrities, what if I find out that they are not as I thought they were?

  2. whitedaisy says:

    Based on his actual life experiences it is possible and maybe likely that he has a soft heart.
    But he does seem like a mess in some form most of the time; he appears to rarely bathe.

  3. Carrie B. says:

    I buy that he has a big heart. But that doesn’t stop him from getting as much tail as he can physically get. He is a man (from what records show) who wrestles with too much accessibility.

    He just seems to be a regular guy who struck it lucky in Hollywood.

    I’m sure he’s still looking for you, Kaiser!

  4. gee says:

    My boyfriend should ditch the coke and keep doing the humanitarian stuff.

  5. mln76 says:

    I guess Gerry it’s possible that has a good heart but when I saw that pap video of him making out with that street performer I felt like I got Herpes. He goes beyond your average male slut actor to extra-sleazy.

  6. brin says:

    Yes, he’s a hot mess and a sleazeball, but he’s my hot mess sleazeball (with a big heart)!

  7. suggabugga says:

    as a professional speech coach I can honestly say his accent is dreadful and completely unbelievable.

  8. azurea says:

    He looks ill.

  9. Sloane Wyatt says:

    It makes me ill to think of running my fingers through Butler’s grease dripping hair. Ewwww.

    Hygiene would make him hot; so simple, but obviously not in his playbook.

  10. carrie says:

    i hope because of this movie,he wants to act in better movies .

  11. LeeLoo says:

    I believe he has a big heart. I also believe he’s a man-whore as well. There is nothing wrong in believing both.

  12. Mari says:

    Am I solo in thinking he looks better meatier…?

  13. kibbles says:

    I loved Dear Frankie. Gerard really needs to be pickier with his choice in movie roles because he’s actually a good actor when he picks meatier roles. Romantic comedies are okay once in a while. Like P.S. I Love You which I thought was an above average chic flick. But then he sells himself out to play in stupid films like the Bounty Hunter, Law Abiding Citizen, and the Ugly Truth. Sometimes he is in great roles and at other times it seems like he is in a bad movie simply to make a quick million.

    Of course, since I don’t know him personally, my opinion of him is just pure speculation and judgment based on his demeanor and behavior in public life. To me he seems like a really friendly and personable guy. One of the few mainstream Hollywood actors who seems to be quite intelligent and witty. And unlike A-list actors like George Clooney and Brad Pitt, Butler seems more down to earth and less arrogant. So I do believe that he is a decent person and probably has a warm side to him that is separate from his Hollywood persona as a player.

    As with his poor choices in movie roles, he seems to sell himself short when it comes to his relationships in Hollywood. He’s having a good time with female celebrities who aren’t that bright and aren’t expecting anything serious either. I personally think he can do better. He’s not just a pretty face. I think there is more to him than most Hollywood actors. So it would be nice to see him return to his Scottish roots along with smaller budget UK films that offer better roles and opportunities to work with talented actors over the typical Hollywood trash.

  14. rkintn says:

    I think he does have a big heart. I also think he is his own worst enemy. He’s been on the cusp of being big for awhile now but he just doesn’t seem to make the right choices to tip on over. I think “Machine Gun Preacher” is just another small step…he needs BIG steps. He also needs to cut his damn hair! I don’t understand why he has looked so rough lately:(

  15. kibbles says:

    I agree, rkintn. Butler could have a respectable and successful acting career without following the Hollywood route. He is a different type of actor from, say, Tom Cruise, George Clooney, Matt Damon, or Brad Pitt. The first obvious difference is that Butler is British and I don’t think he fits quite into the Hollywood mode. Anyone who has seen Dear Frankie will know that Butler shines in that type of acting role, which is why I think he needs to spend a few years making movies like Machine Gun Preacher and smaller independent British films. Maybe his acting isn’t on par with an actor like Colin Firth, but Butler could absolutely establish himself as a fine British actor if he wanted to. Talent takes an actor only so far. After that it’s about picking the right parts. Butler has been successful in making himself into a household name. He’s famous and never has to worry about money again. It’s time for him to break away from his string of bad films and take risks that might not make him a ton of money but will establish his legacy as an actor. Unfortunately, he seems content with the Hollywood lifestyle and making mainstream films that do not push him over that cusp into Oscar worthy status.

  16. regarding accents says:

    The problem is that Sam Childers himself has an arguably mixed up unusual accent from living in different areas of the US. Having heard Sam speak online in various videos, it does sound like to some extent Butler’s got the accent to some extent and certainly the cadence but seeing the whole movie will of course be the proof of the pudding. If you heard Sam’s accent I think even Matt Damon would have trouble fully capturing it.

    Watched Shattered on the weekend, a movie Butler did with Pierce Brosnan in 2007 that went to straight to DVD which I also do not understand, I thought it was one of the better thrillers I have seen in a long time, the ending completely caught me off guard. Actually his American accent seemed very consistent in that movie, more consistent than Brosnan who was doing a Belfast aka Northern Irish accent when he’s in fact Irish. Not sure what happened since.

  17. indarchandra says:

    No.

    Sam Childers is a sociopath, an arms dealer, a lier (particularly about the SLPA) and purveyor of poverty porn. He exploits orphans with out providing any kind of sustainable security.

    I don’t care how tearful the actor portraying him gets. Sam Childers does not deserve the kind of accolades he is about to receive because of this movie. Do a little research. I don’t care how many explosions and or how many badass moment this movie has, there is a difference between fantasy and reality.

    The real Sam Childers, the one who is in South Sudan right now, is a cancer. He does well more harm than good. He is a violent and sadistic man. He exploits children traumatized by a horrific war to traffic weapons and drugs for his own person and financial gain.

    Sam Childers is not a hero.

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