The Total Film Interview - Mickey Rourke

Mickey Rourke is trying very hard. He used to be beautiful. He used to be rich. He used to be… Mickey Rourke. Now he’s a funny-looking cat in love with his dogs – a middle-aged character actor, face battered by boxing, bad decisions and enough plastic surgery to make Joan Rivers blush (if she could). Regrets? He’s got a few. And now he’s trying very hard… to be humble.

“I’ve got to make sure I don’t make the same mistakes again,” he’ll say several times during our interview, hunched puffing Marlboro Reds in a Los Angeles hotel. He means it. Rourke is raw and unsparing in his assessment of how he had it all and “fucking threw it all away”. During his four-and-a-half year stint as a pro-boxer in the early ’90s – after he rejected acting as “not a man’s job” – Rourke was undefeated (nine wins, two draws). But he took a helluva beating. Broken cheekbones, knuckles, ribs… And now he beats up on himself verbally, damning the “jerk-off” he was: the millionaire ’80s movie star who didn’t know the name of his agent or accountant; the street tough whose macho bullshit blinded him to using his talent to make his mark. This was the man who – after electrifying in the likes of Diner, The Pope Of Greenwich Village and Angel Heart – cosied up to Hell’s Angels and gangsters (John Gotti, for one) and chose Wild Orchid while turning down Platoon, Rain Man and Pulp Fiction. Who was arrested in 1994 for knocking about his junkie-model missus, Carré Otis (she later dropped the charges). For this Catholic boy, interview is confession. But with Sin City, he’s beginning to feel he’s finally paid penance. With good reason. As Marv, the bruising, busted-up thug at the centre of Frank Miller’s graphic noir masterpiece, Rourke is outstanding.

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine.