Hugh Grant: Romcoms are a ‘big fat lie’
LONDON
Romantic comedies made Hugh Grant one of the most famous men in the world, but he has a few doubts about their premise.
“The big question is whether the whole idea of a man and a woman belonging together, and this being something we are all desperate for, is true, or a big fat lie,” Grant told reporters in Paris, where he was promoting his new film, fantasy blockbuster “Dungeons and Dragons: Honour Amongst Thieves.”
“And I have a feeling it might be a big fat lie, despite having made a whole career and fortune out of it.”
“I mean, how many really happy relationships do you know? There’s not many,” he continued. “All those romantic comedies I made, it would be very interesting to have the sequel now, which would presumably start with the divorce lawyers.”
As usual, there was a large dollop of mischief in Grant’s comments.
But in a separate interview with AFP, the 62-year-old struck a more serious tone when asked if he had been ambitious during his earlier years.
“I wish I had been more ambitious. I wish I’d had sharper elbows,” he said, suddenly dropping his usual tongue-in-cheek delivery.
“Honestly, I think I’ve been too lackadaisical. I could have tried much harder when I was very bankable and popular in Hollywood,” he told AFP.
“I could have made any film I wanted... but really I just wanted to watch the football.”
The self-doubt is nothing new, Grant has been somewhat ambivalent about his fame ever since “Four Weddings and a Funeral” and “Notting Hill” made him the world’s favorite bumbling Brit in the 1990s.
It at least partly explains his disastrously awkward interview at the Oscars this month, when he was unable to muster the fake excitement expected of stars on the red carpet.
But lately, he seems re-energized by more villainous and more satisfying roles, playing the bad guy in “Paddington 2,” HBO’s “The Undoing,” and now as a power-hungry criminal in “Dungeons and Dragons.”
“Slimy villains do suit me rather well,” he said with a chuckle.