Twenty years after his portrayal of the metal-limbed Doctor Octopus in Spider-Man 2, Alfred Molina is thinking back on the part that he claims “changed [his] life.”
Watch his interview with Vanity Fair below:
Cast as the renowned scientist-turned-mad doctor Otto Octavius in Sam Raimi’s 2002 blockbuster Spider-Man sequel, Molina admits he was playing against type. At the time, he was well-known for his roles as the cunning Satipo in Raiders of the Lost Ark and Mexican muralist Diego Rivera in Frida. Octavius first displays his four intelligent limbs, or tentacles, during a demonstration of a fusion-based energy source. These arms accidentally fused to his spinal column, transforming him into Peter Parker’s (Tobey Maguire) multi-armed adversary.
“It was a big surprise to me, because it’s not the kind of movie that I imagined myself to be qualified for,” In a Vanity Fair career retrospective, Molina states, “You always think of these big action films as [casting] physical types, and I’ve definitely never been that.” After seeing him in Frida, Raimi’s wife recommended the actor, Molina recounted.
“We had a great meeting. And I kept saying, ‘Look, I’m up for it. But I’ve got to be honest with you, I’ve never done anything like this before. And I’ve certainly never worked on a film with all this technology, I’ve never done much green screen or anything like that,'” Molina said. “But what swung it was we did a screen test, where they gave me an approximation of the costume — the big leather [harness] with the big trench coat. And then Avi Arad, who at the time was the head of Marvel, takes off his sunglasses and goes, ‘Put these on.’ I put the sunglasses on, and the whole room sort of went, ‘Oh, this could be the image.’ And I think that’s what swung it.”
Like Willem Dafoe’s Green Goblin, another supervillain, Molina’s Doc Ock was a multifaceted figure. The idea from his tentacles to complete the experiment they began—which threatened to use the sun’s power to destroy the city—was too tempting for Octavius to resist when his wife Rosie (Donna Murphy) perished in the same tragedy that cemented his AI-powered limbs to his body. Eventually, an unmasked Spider-Man persuaded Octavius that his arms had transformed him into a villain.
“The beautiful thing about a lot of the Marvel villains — and, in fact, a lot of the Marvel heroes — is that they all become so reluctantly,” Molina said. “Otto Octavius has this terrible tragedy in his life which changes things, and so they become these monsters, these villains, almost against their will. And what that does, it gives those characters a real level of humanity. It gives them kind of moral dilemmas to deal with, and there’s always a moment when they’re struggling with that dilemma: ‘Should I carry on doing this? Should I pull back? Am I being a bad person?’ And that was all in the script. Sam wanted to develop that, and it gave the character a depth and something that the audience can hang onto. Because he’s no longer a two-dimensional character. He’s not just the bad guy, he’s actually the bad guy with a kind of emotional life. And that just, I think, makes them so much more interesting.”
Octavius gave his life at the end of Spider-Man 2 to destroy his self-sustaining sun. But Molina was able to reprise his legendary role in Spider-Man: No Way Home, a film from Sony and Marvel Studios, almost two decades later.
“Coming back 17 years later to play the character again, no one was more surprised than me,” Molina recalled. “When they asked me, I said, ‘You realize I’m quite a bit older? I’ve got crow’s feet, I’ve got a wattle, you know, a double chin, I’ve got bad knees. And [director] Jon Watts and [producer] Amy Pascal said, ‘No, no, it’s your role. We want you back. We can fix all that, we’ll de-age you. We’ve got the technology, we can change everything.”
The 70-year-old Molina welcomed his comeback to a part he believed to be a one-off, putting himself back in the driver’s seat against three Spider-Men: Tom Holland, Andrew Garfield, and Maguire, his original co-star from Spider-Man 2.
“I was delighted, obviously,” he said. “Apart from the fact that it’s great fun to play, playing that part, in all honesty, completely changed my life. I mean, it did. It just took everything not just to a different level, but also to a whole other group of cinema fans. There’s a fan group that loved all the movies like Chocolat and Enchanted April and Frida and all those movies, and now suddenly the children of those people are kind of digging Fred Molina ’cause he’s playing Doc Ock.”
It’s wonderful to see how a movie role can change an actors life decades later.
What do you think of Alfred Molina’s performance?
Source: Vanity Fair