Director Admits Joaquin Phoenix Documentary A Hoax

 

"Low Down Dirty Money Shame"

His brother-in-law Casey Affleck, who made a documentary about Phoenix’s transition from acclaimed actor to bearded, shambolic hip-hop star, admitted on Thursday that it was an act.

“It’s a terrific performance, it’s the performance of his career,” Affleck told the New York Times.

Affleck said Phoenix put his professional life on the line to star in the documentary, “I’m Still Here,” which captivated viewers at the Venice International Film Festival this month.

At the event, Phoenix swore it was a genuine documentary despite clear indications on the screen that it was a “mockumentary” poking fun at a narrow-minded public.

The buzz about the documentary began when a bearded Phoenix appeared on David Letterman’s chat show in February last year, confused and mumbling.

In the movie Phoenix is at times funny and coherent and at others childish, aggressive and paranoid as he struggles to live with his decision in 2008, which the media greeted with breathless disbelief, to give up acting and take up hip-hop.

The film includes footage of him apparently taking drugs, surfing the Internet for call girls, hosting prostitutes, diving off a stage to attack a heckler and vomiting. It also features rap impresario Sean Combs, who finally agrees to listen to a demo of his hip-hop music.

Affleck has now come clean. Virtually none of it was real, he told the New York Times. Not even the opening shots, supposedly of Phoenix and his siblings swimming in a water hole in Panama. Affleck said that was actually shot in Hawaii with actors. “I never intended to trick anybody,” said Affleck.

He acknowledged that Letterman was not in on the joke involving Phoenix who was nominated for an Oscar for his role of Johnny Cash in “Walk The Line.”

Phoenix, whose sister Summer is married to Affleck, is due to return to “The Late Show with David Letterman” next week — and Affleck said this time he would not be in character.

(Reuters)

About The Author