Fran Kranz on Dollhouse, Cabin In The Woods, and Much Ado About Nothing
Fran Kranz had an acting career before Joss Whedon came along, with roles in The Village, Donnie Darko, Matchstick Men, Training Day, and The TV Set, and appearances on episodes of Frasier, Welcome To The Captain, Private Practice, and It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Granted, a lot of those early roles have names like “Passenger” and “Slacker Boyfriend,” but everyone has to start somewhere. Kranz got a major career break via Whedon’s TV series Dollhouse, where he played Topher Brink, the antisocial genius who made the series’ mind-blanking, brain-swapping technology possible. He continued on with Whedon as Marty, the squirrely pothead who sees there’s much more going on than meets the eye in The Cabin In The Woods, a genre-busting horror-comedy Whedon co-wrote with Cloverfield screenwriter Drew Goddard, who also directed. Kranz will also be seen soon in another Whedon project: Much Ado About Nothing, a version of the Shakespeare play shot in less than two weeks in Whedon’s house, with many other members of Whedon’s usual acting ensemble. To mark Cabin In The Woods’ DVD debut, Kranz talked with The A.V. Club about inadvertent Dollhouse/Cabin crossover, auditioning for Cabin by reacting to a fake monster, and Whedon’s take on Shakespeare in the upcoming Much Ado, which Lionsgate recently picked up for distribution. (Note: This interview largely steers clear of Cabin spoilers, but one question does deal directly with Kranz’ thoughts on the film’s ending.)
The A.V. Club: Cabin In The Woods was on the shelf for a year and a half because of MGM’s bankruptcy. What was it like sitting on everything you knew about the film for so long, waiting to see if it would eventually get released?
Fran Kranz: It was very difficult, because people started to think I was a crazy person. I think some people doubted I ever made a movie called Cabin In The Woods. They might have thought the four months I was in Vancouver, I was off somewhere else or something. It was definitely a struggle, because I had all kinds of people coming up with all kinds of reasons that this movie would never come out, whether it was the financial situation at the studio, or just that a movie on the shelf that long gets kind of a scarlet letter. It becomes damaged property or something; no one wants to go near it.
But I always had faith in the movie because it was so good. It’s so damn crazy and fun, and I love the script. I knew even before I saw it—just having worked on it, being on set practically every day, and caring about it so much, and paying attention to how it was being made—I knew we pulled it off. I had faith someone was going to recognize that at some point, and we would get the recognition that we deserved. So it was very sweet that Lionsgate swept in and the movie found its right home. And now it’s had its success in theaters, but now it’s sort of on the brink of its well-deserved cult-film status, cult-classic status. I think it’s right on the way. As difficult as it was, I guess it makes it that much sweeter to wait on it and finally feel I was right: The movie was great, it was going to come out, and people were going to love it.
AVC: How much of the script did you get to see before getting the role?
FK: I was lucky, because I know there were some actors who had not read the script until they were offered it. I was lucky, because I had a good relationship with Joss—I was working on Dollhouse, we were just finishing up the first season. But I, like everyone else, had to first audition with some fake sides. The role was named Marty, but it was a character being interrogated by police after seeing his friend’s head chopped off in a parking lot of a bowling alley by The Clickity-Clack Man, and all I know about The Clickity-Clack Man is that he had lots of claws, I think about a thousand of them. I had a feeling that wasn’t the real movie, but I didn’t know. I just had to sell it, as painful and uncomfortable as it was to try and sell this insane situation. I think everyone was in the same boat—all these actors got these insane fake sides that they had to do their best to sell.
I think at the end of the day, what Joss and Drew [Goddard] were trying to see is that someone could have fun, but also be sincere about a really outrageous situation, which is certainly where Cabin In The Woods goes. I mean, horror films in general put humans in these awful supernatural or horrible situations, but Cabin In The Woods cranks it up a few notches and becomes outrageous and totally bizarre. I think he wanted actors that would take that not just in stride, but would take ownership of it and have a take on the situation and have their own way of having fun with it.
AVC: Is it true that you based your characterization of Marty in part on an ex-girlfriend of yours?
FK: [Laughs.] Oh, that’s really funny. I’m not trying to say she was some big pothead. I feel like if I say I based Marty on anyone, everyone assumes that person must be a giant pothead. No, it was more just mannerisms. To be perfectly honest, I think I just missed her. We were up in Vancouver, and I was away from my home, and while I love the cast and I love the city of Vancouver, and I couldn’t have been more busy with a film I loved so much, I think I saw some similarities in the character, and the characterization that I had already brought to the table in auditions. I started to see that I had maybe subconsciously taken some things from her mannerisms and her way of speaking, and sort of the sound and qualities of her voice, and I just ran with it. I thought it was a nice way to think of her when she wasn’t around, to sort of keep her close by.