Chris Evans (Curtis)
Chris Evans was interesting. During the casting process we had a very tight meeting schedule with the actors in Jenny and Johanna’s office in L.A. and suddenly we discovered there was a name – Chris Evans – on the list.
“Is this Chris Evans that Chris Evans?”
“Yeah. Captain America.”
“Is he coming?”
”Yeah. He is coming now, from Boston. Maybe he’s on the plane right now.”
So we were very happy. Captain America is coming! We never sent him a script or anything but I have an agent in CAA, he is also in CAA. Maybe his agent told him about this project.
Also the CAA people gave him the DVDs of Mother and Memories of Murder and he loved them. He was fascinated by Song Kang-ho and when we first met he asked me so many things about Song Kang-ho. He watched the fight in Memories of Murder again and again.
“Director Bong,” he asked. “That’s not stunt coordinating. Song Kang-ho is really beating that other actor, right?”
“No…well…maybe sometimes.”
Anyway, he loved Memories of Murder but frankly speaking I had some kind of prejudice against Chris Evans. I thought of him as some kind of typical American hero type of actor, but Jenny did a really wonderful job, she told me to watch the movie Puncture, a very character-driven independent film. In that movie Chris plays a very sensitive, delicate lawyer, but a drug-addicted lawyer. In the movie Chris was very different from Captain America.
Actually, Chris always did some kind of serious character-driven small budget dramas between those huge blockbusters, like Puncture or The Iceman. Chris is a supporting role, but it’s a very unique story about a serial killer based in the 1970s. He has very long hair, he is very unique in that movie.
He already did those very different kinds of job in the movies, but in Snowpiercer we needed very strong action from Curtis, but at the same time Curtis has a very dark and sensitive background story and some very traumatic experiences. We needed a very delicate aspect of Curtis, and Chris Evans was perfect for that.