He’d record Ron’s side of the dialogue, give it to sound guy who’d cut it together in a way he could fit his Reggie dialogue in between his Ron dialogue. But if it was the two of them, Tom and I would rehearse in the morning and he’d read both parts and we’d work out blocking. There were exceptions, but he usually Reggie during the first part of the day because it was the bigger part. He went, from hour to hour, he would be one or the other. How did Hardy shift from one twin to the other while filming? I want to play Reggie but I’ll only do it if I can play Ron also.” Right on the spot I said, “That’s a deal.” And we were off and running from there trying to figure out how to do it. I thought he could pull it off because he has such a take on both of them. On one hand it’s exciting but you don’t want it to be swallowed up by that conceit. I was also initially worried about that because I didn’t want it to be a gimmick. And about halfway through dinner as I was listening to him and looking at him, I was starting to think he could pull off playing both. He was very familiar with them as most people over there are. I figured I’d try to get Tom for Reggie then worry about someone you’d believe as his twin brother. Casting two guys means you’re tied in to having guys who look similar. He read it right away - I was in London at the time - and we had dinner. I knew I had to cast Reggie first whether same actor or not… Tom was on the top of the list for Reggie. My initial instinct was to get two guys to play the brothers. I’m terrified Tom’s going to have his nose broken in the middle of a take. So I need to know so we can pace ourselves.” I said, “In that case I would say three takes.” He goes, “Oh good! Three takes we can go for it on each take.” It was three takes and they really hit each other. I said, “Why you want to know?” He said, “Well, because we’re going to be really hitting each other. His stuntman Jacob Tomuri - they know each other from Mad Max: Fury Road - that morning when we were going to roll, Tom came up to me and asked, “How many takes do you think you’re going to do?” Which he never asked me ever. There’s a scene where he fights himself, or the brothers fight, I should say. We went through weeks and weeks of rehearsals to get a move down so it could be played for real when we were going at it. That’s as important to him as bringing the person to life as anything else that he has to do. Both brothers have their own style in approaching violence. I think the physicality of a character is part of how he expresses who the character is, so he doesn’t want to end up in some generic fight scene. He was handsome and dashing, and all those things he generally avoids. But in this case he played it because it’s a counterpoint to the other brother. What was exciting for me was I wanted Reggie, on the surface, to be more of a classic leading man movie star, which Tom is not really interested in playing that. Because got to play Ron, it made it OK for him to play Reggie who’s much straighter. The irony in that is I got the best of both worlds because of the character of Ron Kray is, in the world of crime, one of the great characters of all time. … Even when he’s a protagonist, it’s a character performance he’s looking to do, really. He’s very much a chameleon, never plays the same guy twice. There are these wild swings in what he does. Tom, I don’t think, has an interest in that. That’s what makes a movie star in a lot of ways. They figure out what it is their audience wants to see out of them and deliver it. You get the same guy over and over again, it’s a comfort zone. Tom Hardy can bring this unique dimension to misguided, even evil characters - in films like Bronson, The Dark Knight Rises, and now in Legend. Confidential (1997), phoned us up to explain how his leading man juggled two very different roles and managed to fight himself: Luckily Helgeland, who won an Oscar for co-writing the screenplay for L.A. But how he did it is a little more complex. In spite of their many crimes - including armed robberies, arson, and even murder - the twins became celebrities, hanging out with the likes of Frank Sinatra and Judy Garland.Īs you can see in the exclusive first stateside trailer above, Hardy effortlessly plays the dual roles. The Kray twins ran the East End during the height of the swinging '60s. But after one dinner, Hardy convinced the filmmaker, telling him he needed to play both parts. It was a role originally intended for two different actors, writer-director Brian Helgeland tells Yahoo Movies. In Legend, Tom Hardy plays real-life identical twins and infamous London gangsters Ronald and Reginald Kray.
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