NEW YORK ā Robert Downey Jr. set out to make an objective portrait, a tribute to his father, the underground filmmaking maverick Robert Downey Sr. His dad had other plans.
āThe key point in this is when he goes, āOK, I think we should split into two camps: The (expletive) movie and the one Iām gonna make,āā recalls Downey Jr., laughing. āI just go, āMan, hats off to you, Pops.ā
Recommended Videos
āSr.,ā directed by Chris Smith, is a work of father-son harmony more than might be suggested by Downey Sr.ās typically brusque assertion of filmmaking independence. Itās a kind of home movie, mostly made by Downey Jr. but with his fatherās own insertions peppered throughout. Itās a sonās loving reckoning with his iconoclast father, a freewheeling cult filmmaker whose experimental films gave Downey Jr. his entry into moviemaking and whose outsized personality did much to inform his son, for better and worse. As Downey Jr. puts it, āMy dad and I are pretty flawed dudes.ā
āIt was a way to put something between us in our own relationship and closure. I didnāt know that it would be the quickest way to the heart of things,ā Downey Jr. said in a recent interview by phone from Los Angeles alongside his wife and producing partner Susan Downey. āItās like a little string you pull at, you know. And it winds up pulling you into a rabbit hole that I kind of needed to go down in order to process and ingest the totality of our relationship.ā
Downey Sr. died last year at the age of 85 after having Parkinsonās. Thatās part of the film; Downey Sr. wanted it to be. āSr," which debuted Friday on Netflix, was made with the intention of capturing his last days: a last stab at gaining some understanding of him, wrestling with their shared demons and, once again, making a movie together. Some 50 years ago, Downey Jr. made his debut in his fatherās antic 1970 dog pound comedy, āPound,ā at the age of 5.
āI have pretty good recall for the entirely of this incarnation, for better or worse,ā says Downey Jr., 57. āThose films and projects, I have very clear memories of that. I can still see the Mounds bar that was being handed to me. It was my first prop I ever had to deal with.ā
Years before he was the Oscar-nominated actor of āChaplinā or the star of āIron Man,ā Downey Jr. was, as he says in the film, ājust Bob Downeyās kid for a long time.ā Absurdist, spontaneous films like 1971ās āPutney Swopeā and 1972ās āGreaserās Palaceā made the elder Downey a pivotal countercultural provocateur who defined himself outside of the mainstream.
In āSr.,ā Downey Jr.ās reverence for his father is easy to see, as is their mutual affection for one another. But that doesnāt mean the old man was always easy on his famous son. Every film Downey Jr. ever made, he wondered: āWhat will Sr. think?ā Every 15 years or so would he get a thumbās up.
āI hate to say it, but he was a bit of a snob. Susan and I did a couple Sherlock movies. He was like, āCute.ā I did a bunch of the Marvel stuff and he goes, āUh uh. Yeah, bomb, bomb. Jokes. Funny robots. I get it.ā I went, āHm. Wow. OK,āā Downey Jr. says. āI remember that he thought āLess Than Zeroā was good. He thought āChaplinā was too episodic. And he really liked that German song I sang when I was 15.ā
Again taking his fatherās direction, Downey Jr. sings that song, with panache, in the film. Though itās easy, as a viewer, to see how much alike they are, Downey Jr. is more hesitant to define what he inherited from his dad.
āI did not get his wildly optimistic ongoing super-curiosity,ā he says. āI would never necessarily marvel at the fact that a duck had baby ducks and those ducks got big.ā
Susan Downey disagrees. āYou absolutely have your observation of the world. Youāre hyper-aware of whatās going on around you and comment on it, much as Sr. did,ā she says. āAnd I think you deal with anything uncomfortable through humor. This is a secret power that you guys have. Thereās wonderful things that come with that, and then thereās probably avoidance patterns that are kept up because of that.ā
On those ā70s films, Downey Sr.ās cocaine use was rampant, an environment that surely had an influence on Downey Jr.ās own struggles later with drug addiction. Itās a point that Downey Jr. raises in the film: āWe would be remiss not to discuss its effect on me,ā Downey Jr. tells his father. He replies: āI would sure love to miss that discussion.ā
But āSr.ā is in many ways a portrait of how both Downeys recovered, stabilized and found peace through family. Downey Jr. ascribes a metamorphosis in his father to his second wife, Laura Ernst, who died in 1994, and his third wife, Rosemary Rogers.
āI can relate to that, too, up until this current administration, the never-ending Susan Downey empire,ā says Downey Jr. āI just have a lot more gratitude.ā
When Downey Sr.ās health waned, they moved the filmās editing suite into his bedroom. Susan Downey, too, lost her father, in 2020, to Parkinsonās. āHe was a saint compared to us Downey boys,ā Downey Jr. says. Movies were how they connected. The last film Downey Jr. and his father watched together was the music biopic satire āWalk Hard.ā They laughed their heads off.
Since premiering āSr.ā at the Telluride Film Festival, Downey Jr. has noticed how the film becomes a projection of others' experiences losing a parent. Toward the end of the film, Downey Jr. goes into his fatherās room, with the camera trailing, to find some final answers. āI was going to get to the bottom of it for once and all,ā he says. Like most sons seeking such definitude, Downey Jr. came out, he felt, emptyhanded.
But in āSr.,ā the two films each are making ultimately seamlessly meld into one, suggesting a deeper understanding between Jr. and Sr. than either might have readily admitted. There are also ongoing discoveries.
After such an unconventional indoctrination to cinema as a kid, Downey Jr.'s genuine, live-wire performances surely owe something to the frenetic energy he had known on his fatherās sets. āI think I had the advantage of it already feeling natural before I came into that quote-unquote industrialized version of entertainment,ā Downey Jr. says.
He often found with other directors something just as comfortable and rewarding. He calls Richard Attenborough ("Chaplin") āa super wise loving grandfather.ā Jon Favreau (āIron Manā) was ālike a brother.ā Movies were and still are, Susan Downey says, āthe family business.ā
āItās very odd, too, because weāre doing this film with Director Park (Chan-wook) now called āThe Sympathizerā where Iām doing a lot of different characters. Itās not experimental at all. Itās very well-fleshed out. But itās kind of reminding me of the Sr. experience," says Downey Jr. "You get dressed up, you try a character and weāre going to film it.ā
Stuck by that fresh realization, Downey Jr. exclaims: āWe're finally figuring everything out in real time! Live from the Gestalt Therapy Epicenter of Southern California!ā
Then he sighs. āSo Iām still working for Dad.ā
___
Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP