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Interview Magazine Profile December '97 issue
Ingrid Sischy: So, as Ben's younger brother, you've been witness to this friendship between him and Matt, right?But you've also got your own place in this story. Clearly they like having you around, and clearly they respect you. They wrote a part for you in Godd Will Hunting, and it was their idea you be a part of this photo shoot, which attests not just their collaborative spirit, but what you bring to the table. Were you at high school with them?
Casey Affleck: No, Matt is two years older than Ben and five years older than me. Although, in another sense, I'm much, much older. IS: Were you serious about acting in high school, like they were? CA:Yes. We all had the same teacher, Jerry Speca. So many people in his class ended up leaving high school and saying "I want to be an actor".
IS: And now you're living in New York City and studying at Columbia? CA:Yes, I'm a sophomore. Earlier I went to George Washington in D.C., but it wasn't my thing so I had a false start. Right after I started, I left to do "To Die For"[1995], which was my first film. IS:What are you studying at Columbia? CA: Eugenics. It's all about trying to get people like me not to reproduce. CA:The acting I did in high school was all the fun stuff-improv and rehearsing and exercises and doing different plays and scenes. None of it was like dealing with your agent, or going to an audition and reading a couple of words cold and waiting half an hour with a bunch of other kids, which turned me off as soon as I started doing it. I hated it. I felt like I was done with it at the time I got "To Die For" IS:Have you always been close to Ben? CA:We were always pretty close. He's been like my best friend for the past twenty-two years. IS:Are you and he competitive? CA:we can't sit down and play chess without one of us getting pissed off. I only experience that with him when he loses, which is most of the time. [laughs] IS:But it doesn't feel like there's competition when it comes to acting. CA:When those guys wrote Good Will HUnting, they wrote me into it. And they didn't have to. So they've been very inclusive. I think when people have that attitude, there's just no room or competetion, because someone is saying they're willing to give. IS:What do you think makes you able to act? CA: I honestly think anybody can be an actor, though I don't actually feel that I am one-I feel more like I'm one of the eggs who's been in Gus [Van Sant]'s omelettes, But then, he is a master chef. IS:What do movies mean to you? CA:They're very powerful, but there was never a point in my life when I saw a movie and said, "This is what I want to be involved in and spend my life doing." I still feel that way when I think about American movies. I know a lot of people will think my views are puritanical. IS:Why do you say "puritanical"? CA:I feel America has run the gamut of attractions that feed on people's desires, because of its consumerism, which uses all its power to sell. Sex, in particular, pervades our culture. And what happenes is that as people get older, one thing replaces another. Security and money replace sex as their strongest desire. There's no discipline anymore-it's just gone from our society. IS:It's interesting to hear a youth talk that way. CA:There've been times when I've been super righteously indignant about having the freedom to do whatever I want and say whatever I want. But this idea of freedom-sometimes it's like all we're doing is demanding a freedom to be ruled. IS:The only way to sort these issues is to be concious of them, right? CA:Right - and disciplined. But you know, I havn't done anything special yet.[laughs] |