VENICE, Italy (AP) Scott Haze says he spent three cold months living in the mountains of Tennessee, subsisting on one piece of fish and one apple a day, and sleeping in caves to prepare for the role of deranged killer Lester Ballard in the film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's novel "Child of God."
"I knew that this was a role that I had to go to crazy extreme lengths," Haze said in an interview Saturday ahead of the film's world premiere in competition at the Venice Film Festival.
Haze's Lester Ballard descends into violence after being kicked off his family's land and losing his parents, moving outside the social order into caves where he abandons himself to extreme degradation. McCarthy's character was inspired by real-life killer and body snatcher Ed Gein, who also was the basis for the Norman Bates character in "Psycho," and Leatherface of "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre."
To prepare for the Ballard role, Haze said he dropped from 195 pounds to 150 pounds (88 kilograms to 68 kilograms) on the apple-and-fish diet while living in a cabin in the Tennessee mountains, sleeping at times in caves, often without a sleeping bag, until the December temperatures dropped too low.
"I slept in caves many nights with bats all around. It was crazy," Haze said. "I let everything go, just hung out with the hillbillies and stayed as isolated as possible."