Josh Peck
"The Wackness"
Interview by Kiko Martinez
I’m
seeing your career at a kind of crossroads from your role in
Nickelodeon’s “Drake & Josh” to more adult-orientated films. Do
you feel that’s where you are at right now?
I don’t know if I’m
that conscious of it. I think I'm just at a more exciting time
in my life. I’m just proud to be a part of something like [“The
Wackness”]. I think it’s rare in life when you find something
that you are truly, truly passionate about and people sort of
validate those feelings. I’m just enjoying being swept up in the
whirlwind.
Do you think a
lot about the journey you’ve taken from a kid’s show like “Drake
& Josh” to “The Wackness?”
Sure, I mean, I've
been doing “Drake & Josh” for five years and before that I did
“The Amanda Show,” so I really grew up with Nickelodeon and they
have been very supportive. I’m really indebted to them because
everything I am is because of them. But with something like “The
Wackness” and years ago with “Mean Creek,” these are definitely
films that are a big leap from a kid’s world. I just think I’m
really lucky to do something like “The Wackness,” which is
something that really speaks to my soul and something I can
balance with “Drake & Josh.” I mean, I’m going to do a “Drake &
Josh” TV-movie in August. There is a good balance there. But
films like “The Wackness” turn me on because they really speak
truth and honesty.
Yeah, you were
great in “Mean Creek.” It was heartbreaking when your character
was killed at the end but think halfway through the movie I
wanted to kill you, too.
(Laughs) Aw, thanks
man.
I’m sure that’s
what you wanted to convey playing this innocent albeit annoying
kid.
The reverence all
goes to the director [and screenwriter] Jacob [Aaron] Estes and
the way he structured the script and the character. It was truly
an inside to a character like that who’s got this fierce defense
mechanism of inevitably pushing everyone away and doing it so
vehemently and being so ridiculously vulnerable. This kid George
[Tooney] had to pile on these defensive spikes that stung
everyone around him so he was left very much alone. It was a
balance of him lashing out and showing the true side of himself,
which was this gently and eventually defective young man. It was
an important balance to have viewers hate him and love him.
When “Mean Creek”
came out and now “The Wackness,” do Nickelodeon executives want
to sit down with you and your agent and talk about this or are
your TV-show career and your film career completely separate?
Nah, they are
totally supportive. I think they are much more interested in how
I conduct myself in my daily, normal life than when I’m
portraying a character in a movie. I think with being on a kid’s
show and being this sort of bohemian role model it’s much more
important that you are conducting yourself well with morals and
values that are in line with their thinking. It’s less about
jumping in to play a character because you are given free range
because it is art. Maybe you can hide behind the art, I don’t
know. But I like the freedom to play these characters and let
out any, maybe, subconscious debauchery in the acting and less
in my real life.
“The Wackness,”
of course, is set in 1994. You were only eight years old then,
so what do you remember about that specific year?
Um, Bugle Boy jeans,
Power Rangers and those Spice Girl lollipops. Yeah, I was only
eight years old so it was kind of a time of a lot of exploration
in my life, mostly in the sandbox. I had to sort of
reinvestigate parts of my life that might have become dormant
and think about what adults were talking about in ’94, whether
it was “Pulp Fiction” or Bill Clinton or Giuliani. I really
wanted to draw what they were exposed to because Luke [his
character] is really a young adult in the movie. For the most
part it was about me getting used to the essence of who this kid
was and picking parts of ’94 whether it was a speech pattern or
hairstyle or something that I could really hinge the performance
on.
I’ve read that
you feel falling in love is all about timing. Isn’t that a scary
thought, to think that the right girl is in front of you but
it’s not going to work out because she’s coming into your life
at an inopportune time?
I think that’s a
fear of my even before I get into a relationship. I’m just
worried about being rejected, man. Unfortunately, relationships
and putting yourself out there and being vulnerable it’s just
life, otherwise you’re not living. It’s that pain that reminds
you that you are alive but it also is a pain that makes you want
to be not as alive. When a movie like this comes along – one
that you almost need a prerequisite to have a certain amount of
heartbreak in your past or something relative to draw from – you
almost think you have some experience point even though at the
time it is going on you’re not really sure if you are going to
live or die. I think we all put a lot of walls up and want to be
careful of getting hurt. I don’t know. I don’t want to sound all
sappy but [love] is kind of all we have in life.
Yeah, I had heard
that you were going through some heartbreak yourself coming into
this movie. Can you tell me about that and how you used those
emotions to your advantage?
I just kind of was
out of my first relationship and a lot of those emotions were
fresh and very deep-seeded. So, to have a person that I could
use to personalize the “Stephanie” character was such a gift.
When I first met Olivia [Thirlby] I just took one look at her
and thought, “Well, I know who you are.”
Now, I’ve never
been to New Jersey, so you have to fill me in. Why is it such a
horrible place?
Aw, man. I talk too
much shit, man. I really gotta close my mouth. It’s a beautiful
state. I can’t really hate on it that much. Maybe I have just
more of a beef with some people I know that live there.
Does Ben Kingsley
go crazy if you forget to call him Sir?
(Laughs) No, not at
all. We never spoke about it. I heard it was something he liked
to be called so we all called him that. We all have some kind of
preface to or a penname or a surname that we like – Sir Ben
Kingsley, Method Man, the Commodore Josh Peck.