skip to main content

From the archives: Colin Farrell brings Tigerland home at the 2001 Dublin Film Festival

Colin Farrell in his breakthrough Hollywood role as Private Roland Bozz in Tigerland
Colin Farrell in his breakthrough Hollywood role as Private Roland Bozz in Tigerland

Colin Farrell is taking part in a free online public interview at the Virgin Media Dublin International Film this Thursday at 4:00pm.

To mark the event, here's our feature from May 2001, when Farrell brought his breakthrough film Tigerland to the Dublin Film Festival and took part in a public interview for the first time in his hometown.

Earning his stripes - Colin Farrell

Colin Farrell might be jaded, but he doesn't sound it. It's 10.30pm on a miserable Saturday night in Dublin; he's just finished a round of interviews after flying in from a movie set in Prague, and within 60 seconds of sitting down in front of a festival audience he's won everyone over with his blend of charm, scattergun wit and colourful language. Rapturously received after a screening of his breakthrough film Tigerland, Farrell seems more intent on having fun than soaking up the plaudits. "Tigerland opened on about four screens in the States," he says. "I'm just glad there's more than ten people in the room."

Farrell may joke about the film's fate in the US, but whether on four screens or 400, his performance did not go unnoticed. He's won the Best Actor Award from the Boston Society of Film Critics and picked up roles in a handful of films (including Steven Spielberg's Minority Report) on the back of it. Tigerland has also, reportedly, helped give him a price tag of $2.5m per picture.

Set in a Louisiana training camp, it follows the experiences of a group of volunteers and conscripts as they 'prepare' for the Vietnam War. Farrell plays Roland Bozz, a Texan drifter who throws more than a few spanners into the army's killing machine with his answer-back ethos and contempt for the powers that be. Playing the American lead in a character - not bullet - driven war movie was a big step up for the former Ballykissangel actor, but also marked a major departure for the film's director, Joel Schumacher. Best known for Hollywood outings like The Client and Batman Forever, for Tigerland Schumacher traded multiple cameras, big budgets and bigger names for a handheld 16mm, a 28-day shooting schedule and a cast of unknowns.

"The only reason I'm here now and the only reason I've done anything afterwards is because of him," says Farrell of the director he's worked with again on the upcoming thriller Phone Booth. He's really open, really lovely and one of the bravest men I've ever met. The producers were going, 'Ballykisswhat? Bozz is Texan - the lead's got to be a star'. Joel just fought for me."

"I decided to learn as much as I could"

Farrell met the director at a casting session in London when he was auditioning for a supporting role. By that stage he had seen 40 actors but sensed that the Dubliner could have what it takes for the lead. They talked briefly before Schumacher sent him away to study the part of Bozz. Back home in Dublin, Farrell and his sister put his audition down on videotape and sent it to LA. Two weeks later, he followed the envelope out West.

With the role in the bag, Farrell began researching Bozz. He already had much in common with the character, having done his fair share of wandering (a year in Australia when he was 17) and also dropping out of further education (after one year at the Gaiety School of Acting). The real test would be the Southern drawl. He went to Toronto, worked with a voice coach and then spent a month by himself travelling around Texas, soaking up the atmosphere and accent. When he returned, Schumacher had arranged two weeks of boot camp in Florida for his cast.

Farrell and 24 other actors were put through their paces by a group of drill instructors, among them a Vietnam veteran, Michael Stokey. "We ate rations, stayed out late, were woken up at 2am and taken out and shown how to take apart an M16 and put it back together," he recalls. "Michael Stokey's job was basically to teach us and train us, take us through, make us run. I went into the boot camp thing thinking I was going to mess around and be as cocky and cheeky as I could, but when I got there I realised the only reason he was there was to actually help us. He still pushed us, roared at us and woke us up way too early for my liking, but I decided to learn as much as I could off him and he was amazing."

Listening to Farrell talk about Tigerland, it becomes obvious that the interaction between actors and crew went far beyond what normally occurs on a film set. He talks about how the to-the-wire shooting schedule helped everyone to bond, and how the film's documentary feel made the players raise the stakes in every scene. The cast remain close and Farrell is the godfather to the son of his co-star Shea Wingham. "What you see was the most amazing experience. Joel wanted to get back to basics, he wanted to get back to telling a story. For most films you perform for the camera; the camera is there and you have to tell the story to it. Joel allowed the camera to find what was happening in the story. There were no rules, no guidelines. There were no marks to hit - you just did whatever you wanted to do. Joel trusted you."

"I don't think you could ever get sick of a story that has so much loss and so much pain"

But while critics have remarked on the power of the ensemble cast - and, in particular, Farrell - many have been less complimentary about Tigerland's plot. Farrell, however, is unperturbed. "I remember the New York Times wrote the worst review I read on Tigerland. They said it was clichéd and all the characters were too well-defined. They kind of criticised all the things that made me like it: if you're going tell a story about the 55,000 men that died and the thousands that fought, you have to pick five or six characters. I don't think you could ever get sick of a story that has so much loss and so much pain. Hopefully, you could tell a thousand of them and there would be something new in every story."

Farrell has returned to fatigues for his latest film, the Prague-shot Hart's War, in which he stars alongside Bruce Willis. "I play a guy who's a bit wet behind the ears, very privileged, a third year Yale law student. He's in a chateau, a cigar-lighter - that kind of solider. He gets captured and it's about him becoming a man."

"Again, like this film," he says, pointing to the screen, "it's based around historical events, so you hope you're doing it justice." If his turn in Tigerland is anything to go by, Farrell has nothing to worry about.

Festival Memories with Colin Farrell is free and online at the Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival at 4:00pm on Thursday, 4 March. To book, click here.

The Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival runs from 3 to 14 March. For full programme details, visit: www.diff.ie.

Click here for more movie news. 

Read Next