George Clooney: Trump’s Charlottesville comments were ‘a great crime’

Film Premiere The Promise

George Clooney, Julianne Moore and Matt Damon cover the latest issue of The Hollywood Reporter, the Toronto International Film Festival edition/preview. George’s latest film, Suburbicon, will screen at TIFF, just as it screened at Venice. Something that cracks me up: Angelina Jolie was blasted for talking about herself during the promotion for First They Killed My Father, with people saying that directors should “never” do that much press. This THR piece is almost entirely about George and Amal and their life together, and the bulk of the interview was conducted in Como, at George’s Italian summer home. You can read the full THR piece here. Some highlights:

George, telling Galloway the story behind his April 28, 2014 proposal to Amal: “I’m the cook in the family. Believe me, Amal makes reservations. I did pasta of some form, not that impressive. And then over champagne, after dinner, I told her there was a lighter to light the candle in the drawer, and she reached back and pulled out a ring. And I did all the stuff, got down on my knee and did all the things you’re supposed to do. I had a playlist with my Rosemary songs on it [his late aunt was the singer Rosemary Clooney], and I was waiting for this song, ‘Why Shouldn’t I?’ ‘Why shouldn’t I take a chance when romance passes by? / Why shouldn’t I know of love?’ It’s a really good song about why can’t I be in love? And it played, and she’s like, ‘Holy sh-t!’ And she just kept staring at the ring, going, ‘Oh, my God.’ It was 20 minutes of me on my knee, waiting for her to say yes, because she was so shocked. She only said yes when ‘Goody, Goody’ came on, which isn’t very romantic — it’s kind of mean: ‘So you met someone who set you back on your heels, goody, goody.’”

Amal, to Galloway, the advice she’ll give her children: “My sister Tala has twins, and they’re wonderful,” she says, then asks me, as a twin, for any advice. I counsel against encouraging them to compete with each other. “Don’t be competitive,” she murmurs, seeming to weigh my words — as if she needs guidance from me or anyone else. I ask if she’d like more children, and she shakes her head. “I’m 39,” she says. “I already had them quite late.”

Amal, revealing what surprises her most about George: At one point, Clooney rises to massage his wife’s shoulders. When he moves out of hearing, I ask what has most surprised her in their four years together. “What a great father he is,” she says. Later, when I mention this to Clooney, he seems caught unawares. “She said that?” he asks. “Really?”

George, on a happy life spent diaper-changing: “Now my house is filled with the warm sounds of babies crying. You should see when my friends show up and see me change a diaper, the laughter that comes from them. I go, ‘I know, I know.’ I’ve given them so much sh-t for so many years, I deserve every bit of it” … “We are unrested — we’re both unrested, and she’s more unrested than me, obviously. But I’m a very good diaper guy, which I didn’t know I would be.

George, on meeting Donald Trump: “I was sitting down at a restaurant in New York [several years ago] and he came in and we talked for a while,” he recalls. “I’d had neck surgery, and he said, ‘I’ll give you the name of a doctor,’ and he wrote me a couple of times with the name. Then he went on Larry King Live and told him I was very short. I’m 5-foot- 11 — I’m not the tallest actor in the world, but I’m not short. That made me laugh.”

George, on Trump’s “great crime”: “It would be best for the country if some of these Republicans — and some of them I’m very good friends with, actually — stood up [to him]. There’s an important distinction that doesn’t get said enough — the difference between Black Lives Matter and the KKK and the skinheads and the alt-right is this: Black Lives Matter was protesting in support of racial equality. Period. Sometimes it got out of hand, absolutely. But that’s what they were doing. You can never say, ‘Well, those guys were bad and these guys were bad.’ And to hear those words come out of the president of the United States, that is a great crime.”

George, on what’s next: “I haven’t acted in almost two years and I am not really sure when the next version of that would be. If somebody brought me The Verdict, I’d jump. But I’m not going to do movies just to be in front of the camera. I did that for a long time and I had a good run. And as you get older, the parts aren’t as interesting. I’m not a leading man anymore. Nobody wants to see me kiss the girl”

On a career in politics: “I’d like to not think I would be in politics. I’d like to think that would make my life miserable. I don’t really think about that. But I do think you always have to participate, in your town and your country and the world.”

[From THR]

George has told the engagement story before, when he appeared on Ellen, and it came across like a rehearsed monologue back then. Maybe he’s still “practicing” that story. If it’s true, then I guess I respect Amal for making him wait for 20 minutes while she really thought about it. What else… I respect Amal for saying that she’s done having babies at 39. And I disagree with George about Trump’s “great crime” of equating BLM with neo-Nazis. While Trump was and is trash for his racism and his comments on Charlottesville, let’s not pretend that there isn’t an embarrassment of riches when it comes to the crimes Donald Trump has committed.

Film Premiere The Promise

Photos courtesy of The Hollywood Reporter.

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27 Responses to “George Clooney: Trump’s Charlottesville comments were ‘a great crime’”

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  1. Nicole says:

    Personally I think George is saying making the false equivalency is a great crime. Not that it’s his only one. One group is fighting racism and one is perpetuating it. Also love that he’s calling out the complicit GOP members. I always thought George had a better handle on these issues than Matt and Ben by miles. I’m sure he’s only gotten better with Amal by his side.

    • Esmom says:

      Yes. And I agree about Matt and Ben, too. As for him calling out the GOP, I would hope that if he’s actually friends with them he would call them out personally. Now.

    • Kitten says:

      Yes this is how I took it as well.

      “Then he went on Larry King Live and told him I was very short.”

      Translation: 45 was intimidated by George so he had to lash out against him on public television. What an insecure d*ck he is.

      • Jayna says:

        Trump is the most insecure man in the world. That’s why it always has to be about him, every speech, needing the adoration of his deplorables, hence more rallies, taking credit for anything and everything, always bringing it back to himself. Me, me, me.

        He’s pathetic.

      • Casey says:

        That was probably the same Larry King ep where Trump bizarrely obsessed and maligned Angelina Jolie. What irks me is neither Clooney not anyone else took him on about what he said about she and Brad.

    • perplexed says:

      Yeah, I didn’t get the impression he was saying that was Trump’s only crime.

      He called it “a great crime”, not “the only crime” or “the greatest crime.”

    • cara says:

      Did Georgie happen to mention who actually carried the twins?

  2. Jenns says:

    How many times is he going to repeat that proposal story? We get it, George. You’re no longer the Tina Fey joke at the Golden Globes. You’re now a happily married man and a father of twins. Sure.

    • Kate says:

      Why do people act like that joke was some big thing for him? It’s not like it was the first time someone had made that joke to his face. It was a running theme for about a decade, like Leo now but with waitresses and Z-listers instead of models.

      Anyway, the joke wasn’t that he couldn’t settle down with a woman, it was that he doesn’t date women his own age. Settling down with a woman 17yrs younger does absolutely nothing to defend against that.

  3. Skylark says:

    He is a self-satisfied bore of epic proportions.

    • JosieH says:

      And his movies are terrible. They have no subtext at all, everything’s completely on-the-nose. Just going by his movies, I’d have to guess he’s a dumb guy who’s convinced he’s a smart one. Suburbicon is getting pretty lousy reviews, and he was gifted a Coen brothers’ screenplay to help him along. How does anybody make a bad movie out of a Coen brothers’ screenplay? That’s really hard to do.

      • Keaton says:

        “I’d have to guess he’s a dumb guy who’s convinced he’s a smart one. ”
        So many Hollywood actors fall in that category. Oddly I’d have to say George is one of the brighter ones of that lot. (Ben Affleck for example makes George look like a genius. lol)

    • Esmom says:

      Self-satisfied bore? I don’t know. You say those things as if they’re such negatives, lol. He’s settled and secure, which seems normal for a guy his age.

      • notpretentious says:

        So true Esmom, as I can relate to being 50. But that was a HILARIOUS comment from Skylark. It epitomizes Trump, doesn’t it?

    • nicole says:

      Skylark, totally agree.

  4. Indiana Joanna says:

    I’ve always found George off putting in interviews. Too much Rat Pack cosplaying from him. Never really delves into serious discussion beyond acknowledging that idiot drump plays to his horrible base.

  5. Jayna says:

    I read the whole article. I didn’t realize he had had another operation or procedure just three years ago for his headaches caused from his neck issues. So he had that since he’s been married to Amal.

    Where the author quoted back to an old interview and a lot of his quotes, it was sad, where he talked about living with horrible chronic pain and coming to terms with it. I remember that’s when he was a drinking a lot because of it. I can’t remember when that interview was, but I remember reading it. I’m glad to hear he’s finally gotten some relief. He needs to start doing different things to strengthen his back, though.

    Another interesting part of the interview was his career. He’s the one actor who admits you have a shelf life as as actor as you age, and even one for directing and producing some day. I’ve always felt he understood this business and how to move through it.

    I was shocked to read they had never discussed having children before they got married, and that it was something they decided they wanted to do after they got married.

    He always likes to brag about his friendship with President Obama, which I never realized goes way back to when Obama was a senator, before even running for the presidency. . I mean, Obama came to his house in England to visit when the kids were born or right before. I guess I would brag if Barack Obama was my friend. LOL

  6. browniecakes says:

    I like George. He is great in Hail Caesar and I always loved him in Oceans 11 and Out of Sight. Very good in the sad movies Up in the Air and Michael Clayton. I hope he acts again. Suburbicon looks a bit dark for my tastes but I think he’s a good director, a bit preachy, but good.

    • Jayna says:

      George keeps talking about how dark it is and not a dark comedy. But there are two Australian guys on YouTube who do reviews. They were at the Venice screening. They are pretty knowledgeable about things I don’t notice, like how George shot the film, etc. But they had some complaints and critiques about it that they thought would have taken the movie from good to great. Both both said they enjoyed it, though, and had funny parts to it or did that just happen parts, and that they would definitely recommend seeing it. So it kind of sounds like a black comedy to me. I know the film gets angrier as it goes along.

      They said the trailer did a great job of masking parts of the movie, so that it’s not exactly what you think from the trailers. There’s surprises. And that the little boy is a big part of the movie. They said Oscar Isaac steals the movie with his scenes.

      Their review made me decide I was going to see it.

    • Kitten says:

      With the exception of the OTT courtship with Amal, I’ve always liked George too. I’m surprised when people call him arrogant or boring. To me, he comes across as self-deprecating and interesting.

      *shrugs*

      • Jayna says:

        Yeah, I don’t get it. And that’s how he comes across to me also. I love his Charlie Rose interviews.

        His OTT courtship was a mess, but these days I’m just glad for the glamour Amal brings, because at least it’s interesting fashion.

  7. sage says:

    I love it, when celebrities have a movie to promote no topic is off limits regarding their private life. I will say, I’m surprised he has not sold his baby pics…yet?

  8. Des says:

    I read the whole thing and the most interesting part of it to me was all the stuff he said about going to Sudan and Amal going into scary situations. I had no idea he’d had to escape the Muslim Brotherhood and stuff. Also, the bit about housing the Iraqi refugee.

    I’m pretty damn sure he’s running for office sooner than later.

  9. Dippit says:

    ‘On a career in politics: “I’d like to not think I would be in politics. I’d like to think that would make my life miserable. I don’t really think about that. But I do think you always have to participate, in your town and your country and the world.”’

    Well that cleared things up.