Skip to main content
Games Radar Newsarama Total Film Edge Retro Gamer SFX
GamesRadar+ GamesRadar+ The smarter take on movies
flag of UK
UK
flag of US
US
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of Australia
Australia
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
Gaming Magazines
Gaming Magazines
Why subscribe?
  • Subscribe from just £3
  • Takes you closer to the games, movies and TV you love
  • Try a single issue or save on a subscription
  • Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From$12
Subscribe now
Trending
  • Best Netflix Movies
  • Best movies on Disney Plus
  • Movie Release Dates
  • Best Netflix Shows
Don't miss these
Austin Butler as Hank in Caught Stealing
Crime Movies Austin Butler's Caught Stealing stunts didn't faze New York City locals, despite "hanging out of a window of a real building" 6 stories up
Matthew McConaughey in True Detective
Crime Shows True Detective star Matthew McConaughey says he'd return as Rust Cohle if the script had the "fire and originality" of season 1: "We nailed that first season"
Dwayne Johnson in The Smashing Machine
Drama Movies Dwayne Johnson opens up over frustrations on being "pigeon-holed" as a blockbuster star: "This is what Hollywood wants you to be"
David Corenswet as Superman with Krypto the dog and a robot in the Fortress of Solitude.
DC Movies Superman star David Corenswet says the DCU movie is "a comic book up on the big screen," which is "a great way to start a new era of comic book movies"
Willem Dafoe and Corey Hawkins in The Man in My Basement
Thriller Movies After 45 years of acting, Willem Dafoe says he's "looking to be disturbed" by new roles as The Man in My Basement approaches: "I'm looking to tap into a sense of wonder"
Josh Brolin in Weapons
Horror Movies Weapons lead Josh Brolin was drawn to Barbarian director's queasy new project "because psychologically, you want to keep confronting things like" toxic masculinity: "This staunch masculinity, I get very sickened by"
Cooper Hoffman, David Jonsson, Ben Wang and more in The Long Walk
Horror Movies The Long Walk screenwriter says he had to "go through the motions" to adapt the upcoming dystopian horror thriller: "We had to ask Stephen King if he was OK with it, and thank God he was"
Josh Brolin in Weapons
Adventure Movies 40 years later, Josh Brolin says he "ruined the first half day of filming" The Goonies because he was so nervous: "I had no idea what I was doing"
Leonardo DiCaprio in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Drama Movies Leonardo DiCaprio says there is only one movie of his that he will rewatch, and reveals his biggest career regret
Mark Hamill as the Major in The Long Walk
Horror Movies After 53 years of acting, Mark Hamill says he's only motivated to take on "interesting" and "atypical" roles: "I'm not on the phone to my agent saying, I gotta be in a Marvel movie"
James Gunn
DC Movies After embracing Superman's Silver Age heritage, James Gunn says some comic book movies can be "pretentious" and "distance themselves from the source material"
Lurker
Thriller Movies New indie thriller Lurker is a tense, cautionary tale about celebrity obsession — and it made me question my own morale
Alfie Williams as Spike and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Jamie in 28 Years Later
Horror Movies "Only Danny Boyle is brave enough to make bold swings like that": 28 Years Later star teases new horror movie, as he compares "experimental" shoot to "technical" Nosferatu's
Cooper Hoffman and David Jonsson at gunpoint in The Long Walk
Horror Movies The Long Walk review: "One of the best Stephen King adaptations ever made"
Cillian Murphy in Oppenheimer
Action Movies Cillian Murphy is glad he's not in Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey: "I have ROMO: 'Relief of missing out'"
  1. Entertainment
  2. Movies

Matthew McConaughey On The Making Of Mud

Features
By Total Film published 24 April 2013

The Texan star on the heartfelt coming-of-ager

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

How did you find shooting in the South?

How did you find shooting in the South?

“It’s a beautiful part of the world. You know I’ve never spent time in Arkansas, which is the state Jeff [ Nichols, director ] is from, which is where we shot this film and it’s called the Natural State and you see why. It’s a really gorgeous place, I loved it, you know.

“The thing about where we shot The Paperboy and where we shot this is that Mother Nature rules down there. I mean, if you look at the way people live in this film, people live in houseboats on the river, you know the houses are on floats so the river, when the river rains come the rivers rise and your raise this morning, if it’s been raining all day, may be 15 feet higher than in the night.

“And they have these steps from the land to the boat house and there were times when we’d show up in the morning and you’re walking down the steps and two days later you’re getting there and you’re walking eight feet up the steps. So you have to really do that dance with mother nature down there.”

Page 1 of 7
Page 1 of 7
How did you come up with the physicality of the character?

How did you come up with the physicality of the character?

“Jeff had some very specific ideas. The tattoo is exactly the design of what he had drawn. The lucky shirt, and these pieces of superstition that were part of Mud’s armour all had real meaning to him. The chipped tooth was a really interesting thing that Jeff and I worked on for a while. The wrinkles – the guy is sun-tarred and tethered and he hasn’t had a shower in weeks, you know what I mean, in the river.

“He’s living on a deserted island here for the last couple of weeks on the run. How did he get there? What has he been able to eat? Things like that.”

“[ How did he get there? ] Well, he swam there with a certain plastic bag that he’d gotten from the local piggly wiggly and got a few rations and some packs of cigarettes and, you know, swam out. That was all fun stuff to go back and answer those questions that had to do with ‘How do you eat your first can of beans that someone gives ya?’, ‘How hungry are ya?’ you know, things like that. All those things limit the behaviour."

Page 2 of 7
Page 2 of 7
What can you say about Muds relationships?

What can you say about Muds relationships?

“Well it’s funny, the only relationship that you - what do you call it ‘requited’ – the only relationship that really comes together is Mud and his mentor, the Sam Shepard character.

“Mud’s the conduit for Ellis, to say ‘Don’t stop believing in that, you know, Nooo. As much as the world tells you to make sense out of it, be practical – no, no, it’s not true. Don’t listen to the examples.’ You know you look at things today, what is it, 50% of marriages will get divorced or something like that. So you know a good relationship or marriage with someone, the world’s not set up to support that.

“Some people viciously want to break it up, other things break it up that are not vicious: you get busy, you want to work, you move to different places, everything is not set up to make the thing work. The thing that we all pursue and would like to have.

“But Mud’s a guy who – and it’s part of the thing that turned me on to inhabit the guy– he’s a dreamer living in the clouds and that’s where he needs to stay. If he ever gets grounded and gets sensible, God, you know. So yeah I think there is some symbolism in the fact that he survives in the end. I didn’t want to see that dream die, either, and the dream doesn’t have to die.”

Page 3 of 7
Page 3 of 7
How much of a part does the American South play?

How much of a part does the American South play?

“[ Jeff ] said earlier, which is a good way to put it, the south is seen as somewhere small, ditzy, small places but he has a very vast view of those small rural towns. That small household, that has expanded that entire view of what the relationship is in this family. How is it not working between the mother and the father?

“So the South is definitely a character in the film, it definitely feels like a classic American film. But that’s also to do with Jeff’s directing style in this film, it’s very linear, it’s very deliberate. He wrote it, he wrote every word for a reason. It’s very poetic, the script, but it’s [ to do with ] affairs of the heart, it’s very universal, it’s not only American.

“If it translated to any of you, and if you came away feeling any of the things you just said, it doesn’t matter where you’re from to understand or feel those things. That’s the language of love, isn’t it?

“That’s a testament to Jeff, who wrote it and directed it. He wants this to translate to humanity and not just be a small Southern picture about these people that happen to be in this small place with these few characters. It’s not bound to that place in time, it’s not even bound to a time.”

Page 4 of 7
Page 4 of 7
Can you tell us something about the shoot

Can you tell us something about the shoot

“I loved the shoot, I love the south, I love being out there in nature like that. What was also great was that we weren’t on a bunch of stages. The stage was the Mississippi River.

“So then to live there for a while, to camp out there, you quickly get the rhythm and the sense of almost smell and taste and humidity and weight and how time sort of just trickles along like that river.

“It’s at four miles an hour, it just slowly moves and it’s an unstoppable force, but it’s just moving slowly and deliberately. But it also takes things away as it gives things back.”

Page 5 of 7
Page 5 of 7
Jeff said he wrote the piece for you. What do you see of yourself in that character?

Jeff said he wrote the piece for you. What do you see of yourself in that character?

“Well, I have still inside of me a lot of innocence. I’m not nearly as naïve as I used to be, thankfully, but you know they say as you grow older you grow wiser, you should know better, and you know well there’s some things that you know worse.

“There’s some things that you don’t want to [ know ], life teaches you some lessons that can kind of creep in and break that dream a little bit. Pragmatism does that. And all of a sudden, the avenue between here and here becomes using a one-way street from the head down.

“But when we are children, it’s from the heart up, that’s where the source is coming from. As you get older, you get more above the shoulders. You get hurt, and you don’t want to be hurt again. It’s survival, you get your heart broken and your body tells you ‘I don’t like that feeling, I don’t want that again’.

“But I still have that in me, I’ve always understood and always believed in that dream and that innocence. That even though you learn hard lessons in life, it doesn’t make that any less true, no way, never tell anyone or yourself that that is not true.

“I don’t know many people at all that have a driver’s licence or can have the sensibilities that Mud does, but Mud’s not really of this world. He’s not grounded by any means. He’s practical in the sense that he knows how to fix things and do things but as far as his heart, it’s completely youthful and innocent. So it was refreshing that, but in the end I understand that purity.

“It was really fun for me, it was a really fun four months in that heart-space and that headspace. He doesn’t compete, there’s no ego about his love, he’s not condemning her for leaving him, whether he understands her or not. I’ve always said this: Mud does fate, but he don’t do suicide. He does fate though, it’s all fate for him. Everything is a sign.”

Page 6 of 7
Page 6 of 7
What motivates you as an actor?

What motivates you as an actor?

“I tell you one of the real joys, for me. My favourite part is the making. I like the daily going to work. I love being on set, it’s my favourite place to be. Daily making the construction of the character, making a movie with a bunch of people who’ve all come here to do this, that’s my favourite part.

“Afterwards, what makes me feel the best? Well there’s two things as an actor. One is if someone goes ‘I know that guy, I know him’ that’s a real compliment in the sense that you’ve created a character that is somewhat documentary for that person because it felt like a real life character.

“The other thing is when someone comes up and they tell you what they felt of the character and they’re using the exact same dialogue that you wrote down two years ago what I was trying to translate and it’s like ‘Ah, you read my mail’. So it means I grabbed that definition of the man and behaved that way and gave off that and it came out the other side without speaking you came back and gave me the exact definition, that translation is really nice because it’s like charades, you know.

“I have the definition here, and then I’m going to explain through a whole movie what I’m going for and you come back and you explain it almost word for word, I’m like: [ sighs in relief ]: it translates."

Page 7 of 7
Page 7 of 7
Total Film

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. 

See more Movies Features
Read more
Austin Butler as Hank in Caught Stealing
Austin Butler's Caught Stealing stunts didn't faze New York City locals, despite "hanging out of a window of a real building" 6 stories up
 
 
Matthew McConaughey in True Detective
True Detective star Matthew McConaughey says he'd return as Rust Cohle if the script had the "fire and originality" of season 1: "We nailed that first season"
 
 
Dwayne Johnson in The Smashing Machine
Dwayne Johnson opens up over frustrations on being "pigeon-holed" as a blockbuster star: "This is what Hollywood wants you to be"
 
 
David Corenswet as Superman with Krypto the dog and a robot in the Fortress of Solitude.
Superman star David Corenswet says the DCU movie is "a comic book up on the big screen," which is "a great way to start a new era of comic book movies"
 
 
Willem Dafoe and Corey Hawkins in The Man in My Basement
After 45 years of acting, Willem Dafoe says he's "looking to be disturbed" by new roles as The Man in My Basement approaches: "I'm looking to tap into a sense of wonder"
 
 
Josh Brolin in Weapons
Weapons lead Josh Brolin was drawn to Barbarian director's queasy new project "because psychologically, you want to keep confronting things like" toxic masculinity: "This staunch masculinity, I get very sickened by"
 
 
Latest in Movies
Mark Hamill admits he thought Luke Skywalker returning in The Force Awakens "would be a mistake" at first
 
 
Man of Tomorrow concept art showing Superman and Lex Luthor teaming up superimposed over a group of heroes from the cover of Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?
Almost 90 years after Superman was first called the Man of Tomorrow, James Gunn is reviving the name for his big sequel
 
 
David Corenswet as Superman
Superman fans are discussing who should play Brainiac in James Gunn's DCU, and they're looking at actors who embody the character's "cold calculating voice" and "alien intelligence"
 
 
Robert Pattinson in The Batman
Clayface Easter egg could be yet another hint at Robert Pattinson in the DCU, and fans are going wild
 
 
Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale
Downton Abbey helped me through the toughest times, but The Grand Finale feels like the perfect time to wrap things up
 
 
Jackie Chan & Tony Leung Ka-fai
Jackie Chan meets his match in the trailer for a new action thriller that has been leading the Chinese box office for three weeks
 
 
Latest in Features
Pokemon Pokopia screenshot showing Charmander, Bulbasaur, and Squirtle all gathered around a Ditto in human form between two green trees
Pokemon Pokopia: everything we know about the Pokemon game that looks a lot like Animal Crossing
 
 
A taurus-shaped robotic figure with flaming innards, against a dark background with rocks visible
Helsmiths of Hashut review: Fear this new Warhammer Age of Sigmar army, because it's gonna kick ass
 
 
A screenshot of the upcoming Switch 2 game, Fire Emblem: Fortune's Weave with a character using a purple energy blast
Fire Emblem: Fortune's Weave – Everything we know about the strategy game's Switch 2 debut
 
 
Mario
How well do you know the Super Mario series?
 
 
Hade 2 early access screenshots
After 105 runs in Hades 2, I suddenly unlocked three huge side stories I thought were bugged and I guess I'll be here 'til launch
 
 
Cronos tips
Bloober Team just teased its unannounced Switch-only horror game for maybe the first time since 2024, and my dream of seeing Nintendo get NSFW has been reignited
 
 
  1. Gwent: The Legendary Card Game box on a wooden surface, with cards visible in the background
    1
    There's now a real version of the Witcher Gwent card game, and it's just as engrossing as the original
  2. 2
    Borderlands 4 review: "Undeniably an excellent looter shooter, but one that requires a bit of tunnel vision to fully enjoy"
  3. 3
    This enormous exploration board game won't be for everyone, but it's a masterclass in narrative and sandbox gameplay
  4. 4
    Hollow Knight Silksong review: "Worth the wait and then some, this isn't just more Hollow Knight but an evolved, spindly beast all its own – even if it's fiddly at times"
  5. 5
    Cronos: The New Dawn review: "An unabashed mash-up of survival horror greatest hits, from Dead Space to Silent Hill, with plenty of its own gory ideas"
  1. Vera Farmiga as 'Lorraine' in The Conjuring: Last Rites
    1
    The Conjuring: Last Rites review: "Not bold or memorable enough for the Warrens' final chapter"
  2. 2
    Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle review: "Roars past Mugen Train as Demon Slayer's best adventure yet"
  3. 3
    The Long Walk review: "One of the best Stephen King adaptations ever made"
  4. 4
    Frankenstein review: "A classy, if somewhat safe, adaptation"
  5. 5
    Weapons review: "A twisted fairytale that bests Barbarian"
  1. Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams, Luis Guzman as Gomez Addams, and Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams in Wednesday season 2 part 2
    1
    Wednesday season 2 part 2 review: "Ortega shines, but it's a zombie who steals the entire show"
  2. 2
    Peacemaker season 2 review: "Darker and sadder than the first year, but there's still a lot of fun to be had with the 11th Street Kids."
  3. 3
    Wednesday season 2 part 1 review: "Complex and exciting but weighed down by too many subplots"
  4. 4
    Alien: Earth review: "Arguably the franchise's strongest outing since James Cameron's Aliens"
  5. 5
    King of the Hill season 14 review: "Hank Hill himself has evolved into a much more open and accepting person"

GamesRadar+ is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Review guidelines
  • Write for us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...