WILL
Will Smith movie star
By Scott Bowles
USA Today
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LOS ANGELES — The biggest star on the planet is sucking his thumb.
"Damn," Will Smith says on the set of "Hancock," trying to shake the pain of a thumbnail that split in two as he was thrown through a mock wall. "All these crazy stunts we're doing, and this is how I get hurt. I didn't see that coming."
Which is strange for Smith, who is nothing if not calculating.
For all the on-screen charisma that has made him a Hollywood ATM, Smith is, at his core, a statistician with social skills. He breaks down the films he's considering into subcategories — are there enough special effects, a love story? — to calculate their commercial or Oscar viability. Most Mondays, he pores over box office reports the way sports nuts read box scores, even when he doesn't have a movie in theaters.
That knack for cinematic algebra makes studios the kind of money once reserved for white men named Tom.
All of which makes his recent career choices a bit of a puzzle. Where once Smith saved the world from aliens with a grin and laser gun, lately he has been, well, surly.
On Wednesday, he opens "Hancock," a superhero story about a crime fighter who loves his whiskey, hates his job and doesn't mind chucking children a few hundred feet in the air. Think Superman as a hobo on a bender.
Before that, he anchored "I Am Legend," an apocalyptic drama in which he played one of New York's last survivors. While the movie was a smash, it took some fans aback with its gloomy tone and a scene in which Smith is forced to kill his dog bare-handed.
But Smith says it's time to break out and find real success. Seriously.
"I don't feel like there's anything I can't do, no movie I can't make," he says. "I feel like the next 10 years are going to be my sweet spot."
That's a frightening prospect, considering that the guy has two Oscar nominations and has eclipsed Tom Hanks and close friend Tom Cruise as the most bankable man in the industry.
And, if "Hancock" does as well as projected, he'll become the first actor in Hollywood history with eight straight movies to rake in more than $100 million.
"He's one of the last true leading men," says Alex Proyas, who directed him in "I, Robot." "There's a connection he has with audiences who will see him in anything he does. I don't quite know how you explain that kind of magic."
Smith does it with integers.
"I study patterns," he says. "Nine out of the top 10 biggest movies of all times have special effects; eight out of 10 have creatures in them; seven out of 10 have a love story. So if you want a hit, you might want to throw those in the mix. I just study patterns and try to stand where lightning strikes."
A 'TRUE MOVIE STAR'
That would make Smith the key on Hollywood's kite. Since 2002, he has been flop-less; his lowest-grossing movie was "Bad Boys II," a critically assailed film that still brought in $138 million.
But don't be fooled, analysts say, into thinking of Smith as just a popcorn star.
Consider "The Pursuit of Happyness," a dark, 2 1/2-hour drama Smith describes as "a black guy trying to get a job." The movie was meant more to give Sony Pictures a fall prestige film than stuff its coffers. It grossed $163 million, and earned Smith an Academy Award nomination.
" 'The Pursuit of Happyness' and 'I Am Legend' don't get the credit they deserve," says Brandon Gray of ticket-sales tracker Box Office Mojo. "Both of those movies broke radically from his usual roles and still did big business. He can safely lay claim to being the only true movie star out there right now."
That doesn't mean Smith is bulletproof, Gray says. He says that "Legend" "might have left a sour taste, particularly the dog scene.
"Hancock," Gray says, "will be a test if there was some residue left over. Even if a movie is a tremendous hit, it can have a negative effect on a star."
Smith has been taking more knocks than usual, primarily for his ties to Cruise and speculation that he has converted to Scientology.
But Smith, who was raised Baptist and says he remains Christian (he co-founded the nondenominational Christian church Living Waters in San Fernando Valley), takes such gossip about as seriously as he does marauding space creatures.
"You have to let that roll off you," he says. "There's a natural narcotic my brain must pump, because negativity doesn't last. It's strange to play a guy like Hancock, who can't find something to feel good about. That's the opposite of who I am."
To prepare for the role, he watched W.C. Fields and "All in the Family": "W.C. Fields was hilarious being mean to kids. And Archie Bunker was a jerk, but he was hilarious," he says.
"I've got this theory that as long as your characters are harmless, or in pain, they can be funny. Even when they're mean to kids."
He has applied part of that theory to parenting his children, Willow, 7, and Jaden, 9, whom he had with wife Jada Pinkett, and Smith's son from his first marriage, Trey, 15.
"The kids can do anything they want, as long as Daddy thinks it's funny," he says. "And artistically, that's where you need to be, too. You have to find the humor in things."
Still, he's bothered by how the entertainment media handle Cruise's faith.
"That's painful for me to see," he says. "I've met very few people committed to goodness the way Tom is. We disagree on a lot of things. But even with different faiths and different beliefs, at the end of the day, goodness is goodness."
Their relationship has sparked a friendly rivalry between the two, though Smith says it's not a box office battle.
Instead, they see who can sign autographs longer.
"It's hard to beat that dude," Smith says. "He has another gear. He did 2 1/2 hours in France for 'Mission: Impossible' on the red carpet. Now when I go to France, people will say, 'You know, Tom was out here for 2 1/2 hours.' "
HEADSTRONG
"Hancock" co-star Charlize Theron considers Smith's spell on fans almost cultlike. "He's making them drink the Kool-Aid," she says. But, she's quick to add, "He really is that guy. He really is that energetic. He really loves people. He loves life. He doesn't take it for granted. He goes through life like a steamroller."
Sometimes, a headstrong steamroller. "He has thought out every scene, every word in the screenplay, and he has a theory about all of them," says "Hancock" director Peter Berg. "He's scary smart. He plays chess. He taught us all how to solve the Rubik's Cube (a skill he learned for 'Happyness'), though he's still the only guy who can do it."
And Smith stands his ground if he thinks a scene doesn't add up, either for laughs or action.
"It's rare that a decision is made in Will's world until all identifiable options have been discussed," Berg says. "He can mentally exhaust you. There were times I had to say, 'Will, I'm going home. I don't have the strength to battle you anymore.' But his instincts are usually right."
Correction, Smith says. It's not all instinct.
"I think of the universe as this big, master computer," he says. "The keyboard is inside each of us. I have a keyboard inside of me. I just have to figure out what to type, learn the code, to make the things happen that I want."