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Russell Brand comes of age in 'Arthur' remake
  • | AFP | April 09, 2011 08:17 AM

Thirty years after Dudley Moore brought the world "Arthur," Russell Brand breathes new life into the drunken playboy, in what could be called a coming of age for the recently-married British actor.

Actor Russell Brand attends the New York premiere of "Arthur" at Ziegfeld Theatre on April 5.

The original "Arthur" took nearly $100 million at the US box office and won two Oscars in 1981: best supporting role for John Gielgud and best song for the Burt Bacharach theme tune "Best That You Can Do."

With the remake, out Friday in the United States before its release in Europe and Asia, Brand says he was aware of what he had to live up to in his performance.

"\'Arthur\' is a lovely film and Dudley Moore\'s performance is iconic. So not pressure, but duty. And it\'s a duty that we took very seriously," the flamboyant former stand up comic told AFP in Beverly Hills.

"I know the movie very well, it was one of my favorites when I was a kid... It was more a privilege that a pressure."

Arthur is a young millionaire playboy too busy partying in New York, accumulating romantic conquests or simply getting drunk to pay much attention to his family\'s honor.

But he is forced to take his duties seriously when his mother pushes him to marry the wealthy and suitable Susan, played by Jennifer Garner, just as he discovers true love in the arms of big-hearted but poor Naomi (Greta Gerwig).

It is a role that fits Brand like a glove -- he married US pop singer Katy Perry last November, seemingly turning his back on a hitherto colorful life of debauchery, booze and sex and drug addiction.

"I\'m also producer on the movie so I was involved in some way. It\'s a remake of a classic tale. If I did it it\'s probably because what happens here also happened in my own life," said Brand, 35.

"I\'ve fallen in love, got married and necessarily grown up. So yes, I can see why at the moment I maybe resonate with those things. I think these are important things in movies in general, the idea of becoming a man."

"I Kissed a Girl" star Perry played a crucial role in ending his extended adolescence. "I think falling in love and getting married contributed hugely. I changed a great deal as a result of that," said Brand.

In the film, Arthur also has a guardian angel. In the original film, it was his butler Hobson (Gielgud). In the remake, Hobson changes sex, and is his governess, played by Oscar-winning fellow Brit Helen Mirren.

The pair -- who did a skit together at this year\'s Oscars show in February -- clearly get on like a house on fire.

"There\'s no one else that could have played it more expertly, committedly than Helen. It\'s more fun when someone confounds your expectations," said Brand.

"No one would have imagined that (she) is as mischievous as she actually is. So that was a real thrill... I took great delight in tormenting (Mirren). It was really good to change things and say peculiar things."

The film also proved to be a learning experience.

"I learned a lot on this movie, from the director... I learned so much from working with such brilliant actors (as Mirren) and I learned never to do a scene in which Nick Nolte gets the hands on your testicles," said Brand, recalling a painful horse riding scene.

Mirren, speaking at a press conference to present the film before its release, called the experience an "education.

"I was someone who was learning stuff. I\'ve never done a film that is called a comedy before," she said.

"It was one of the reasons I really wanted to do the film and I was very lucky that I was working with such brilliant and experienced people in the world of comedy."

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