Brendan Fraser Responds To Backlash Over Wearing Fat Suit In ‘The Whale’
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Brendan Fraser attends "The Whale" U.K. premiere during the 66th BFI London Film Festival on Tuesday. (Photo: John Phillips via Getty Images)
Brendan Fraser says he hopes that his controversial comeback role will “change” the way society perceives and treats fat people amid mounting criticism.
Fraser will star in Darren Aronofsky’s upcoming film “The Whale,” which will hit theaters in December. Fraser plays Charlie, a 600-pound gay man who is trying to reconnect with his estranged daughter while grieving the loss of a lover.
Fraser also wears a fat suit in the movie — a practice that Hollywood has historically used to stigmatize people with larger bodies.
The act — along with its connotations that being fat is a joke, disgusting or a personal failing — has also made it more difficult for plus-sized actors to get roles.
“I’m not a small man,” Fraser told Newsweekwhen he was asked about criticism surrounding his fat suit at the BFI London Film Festival this week. “And I don’t know what the metric is to qualify to play the role. I only know that I had to give as honest a performance as I can.”
Premiering at the 79th Venice Film Festival 🇮🇹
• Darren Aronofsky's THE WHALE starring Brendan Fraser and Sadie Sink
• Joanna Hogg's THE ETERNAL DAUGHTER starring Tilda Swinton
• Ti West's PEARL starring Mia Goth pic.twitter.com/AxlAbhWDRo— A24 (@A24) July 26, 2022
Fraser also expressed to Newsweek that he hopes his turn as Charlie will help shatter stereotypes.
“I’m hopeful that we can change some hearts and minds at least in terms of how we think and feel about those who live with obesity,” he said.
“So often, those people are dismissed in our society, or the object of scorn and derision, and it’s unfair to them. I believe that shaming people for that reason is almost the last domain of prejudice that we overlook, and I think we can do better to change that. So I hope that this film might change some hearts and minds.”
Although critics who have seen the film agree that Fraser’s performance in “The Whale” is the highlight of the movie, others have expressed concern over how director Aronofsky portrays fat people.
This has resulted in many expressing conflicting feelings about “The Whale” being billed as Fraser’s big comeback role.
I see I’m going to be stuck between how much I root for Brendan Fraser and how much I hate fat suits.
— Linda Holmes (@lindaholmes) September 5, 2022
Hey, everyone, I know it sounds hard, but I promise that if you are willing to put in a few minutes of your time, you will be able to hold both "Brendan Fraser deserves the world" and "The Whale is unapologetically fatphobic and deserves to be critiqued for that" in your heart.
— Amy (searching for an Aveggies costume) (@spooloflies) September 5, 2022
If you're thin or even a smaller fat and you go see The Whale, I hope you think about the harm fat suits do to super fat people like me, and the harm done by portraying people like me as tragic figures.
— Ben Hex 🏴 (@WrexBen) September 5, 2022
TBH, the worst thing about THE WHALE is going to be the way people write and talk about fat people when this movie comes out.
Case in point: screenshots from Variety's appallingly fatphobic review: pic.twitter.com/EhClaxCPN6— Mallory Yu (@mallory_yu) September 5, 2022
Sarah Marrs of Lainey Gossip said in her review of “The Whale” that although “Fraser makes his performance not about Charlie’s body but about Charlie’s regrets,” Aronofsky seems to view the character differently.
Marrs wrote that Aronofsky is “cinematically occupied with the limits and grotesqueries of the human body, [and] DOES make the film about Charlie’s body.” Marrs noted that the movie’s score “swells” whenever it’s focused on Charlie’s physicality, and that the sounds of the character eating are amplified “rendering a biological necessity disgusting in context of a fat person doing it.”
Marrs wrote that Aronofsky makes “a spectacle of the big man binging, which in turn degrades Charlie and gives the audience permission to, say, laugh at a scene in which Charlie cannot bend enough to reach something he’s dropped.”
“The audience’s laughter and often audible revulsion are results of Aronofsky’s choices, which do not extend compassion to a man caught in an emotional maelstrom but turns obesity into a sideshow,” she continued.
Katie Rife, a film critic who reviewed “The Whale” for Polygon, slammed the films’ fatphobic messaging on Twitter after watching it at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
I can’t recommend in good conscience that fat people watch The Whale. I can’t recommend that skinny people watch it either, since it reinforces the notion that fat people are objects of pity who have brought their suffering upon themselves through lack of coping skills. #TIFF22
— Katie Rife (@RifewithKatie) September 12, 2022
Rife also warned in her spoiler-heavy Twitter thread that people who have experienced disordered eating may find “it incredibly triggering.”
Meanwhile, Aronofsky told Newsweek that a lot of the negative chatter around the film are from those that “have not seen the film.”
“So I welcome everyone to see the film because the film is about bringing empathy to characters that you don’t expect to feel for,” he said.
In regards to Fraser wearing a fat suit, Aronofsky told the outlet that it was a necessity.
“There’s no way you can cast someone to play this job, so we had to use makeup to get there,” he said.
This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.