New York Magazine

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Skip to content, or skip to search.

Jason Bateman, Act Two

ShareThis

Bateman and Jennifer Aniston in The Switch.   

When Bateman got the call to audition for Arrested Development, “I really thought my baggage would deem me ineligible for this edgy new product. But, amazingly, they liked me. It’s always obnoxious to hear an actor say, ‘What a close family we were! How much fun we had!’ But it’s true. What was unique about the show was that it was everybody’s sense of humor, including [creator] Mitch Hurwitz, so it was just a dream.” Bateman’s withering cracks, the cocked eyebrow, the blank stare that speaks volumes, had found a perfect home in Michael Bluth.

David Cross, his Arrested co-star (and fantasy-baseball-league-mate, along with Olbermann), says Bateman “was a natural leader on set. He fought for us, and I remember being so moved when he won the Golden Globe. Jason thanked all of the crew—he memorized their names and said every one. I never thought I’d say this, until I lived in L.A., but the most grounded, egoless, rational, and down-to-earth people are the ones born and raised there. And that’s Jason. The dicks are the ones who come from New Jersey and Tacoma and everywhere else to be a star.”

Bateman’s co-star in The Switch, Jennifer Aniston, traveled in his circle of friends in the eighties, and their past makes for an appealingly relaxed chemistry onscreen. They play best friends, and when her Kassie gets pregnant using what she thinks is the sperm of the more obviously hunky Patrick Wilson, his Wally has to deal with unexpected feelings. “I might be projecting, but I think the film is about two people who aren’t necessarily typical candidates for a long-term relationship, and they just discover, Why not?” says Bateman, who is now shooting another film with Aniston, the comedy Horrible Bosses. “If you were to track Kassie and Wally in ten years, their relationship would be stronger and even more fun. And I think that’s true. Because that’s what I’m in with my own wife.”

Bateman had known Amanda Anka, daughter of Paul, for ten years before they started dating. “I only wanted to get married once, so when I felt I was ready to handle it, I looked at my relationships and noticed that boyfriends get tired of girlfriends, and vice versa, but you never get tired of your friends.” They married in 2001, and have a daughter, Francesca, who is nearly 4. “It’s really nice to be with your friend every day,” he says, with seemingly no sense of how adorable that is.

What Bateman brings to The Switch—to all of his best work—is believability. He comes from a more realistic gene pool, and gets cast as regular guys and businessmen. The funny, he says, comes not just from the wisecracks, but from knowing these guys are losing it inside. “It earns you a lot of snark if you’re able to convey vulnerability,” says Bateman. And it could earn The Switch a rare audience: men willingly accompanying girlfriends to a romantic comedy.

The film, initially called The Baster, was going to be released by Miramax until the studio shut down. After it was adopted by Disney, Bateman was concerned that the family-oriented company might go for traditional romantic-comedy packaging. So he was relieved to see an ad that shows him holding a sperm cup rather than “Jen and I, arm in arm, looking at each other like, Oh, you!” The actor, it turns out, is fascinated by marketing. Last year, he and another Arrested co-star, Will Arnett, formed an online advertising company, DumbDumb Productions. “It’s something that came from us wanting to tap into the community we’re part of—people who do shorts on College Humor or Funny or Die. And I’ve always loved commercials. I like working out how to organically weave a brand’s message into the writing process. It’s like an improv show, where comics ask the audience to throw out a word and a skit is built around it.”

DumbDumb’s first major gig came via Silverman, who is now attached to Barry Diller’s IAC. “Ben set up meetings with a lot of big brands, including Wrigley.” The resulting trio of Internet-only commercials for Orbit gum is unexpected and very funny. “We asked Orbit what their slogan was and they said, ‘A Good Clean Feeling,’ ” says Bateman, who co-wrote and stars in the spots with Arnett. “So we came up with the concept of creating dirty situations, and once you chew the gum it’s perceived as clean. In this case, the situation was statutory rape. The ones coming up are Internet porn and a strip bar.” And those are the ideas Wrigley didn’t reject.

Arrested Development opened a door to a comedy candy store Bateman can’t get enough of. His A.A.D. career is all about working with the cool kids, and taking even tiny parts to do so: Starsky & Hutch, Dodgeball, Up in the Air,State of Play, and Juno (though he says Juno had less to do with the script than with “getting the hell out of the house for two weeks” when his daughter had colic). He describes feeling “giddy and vibrating” when Judd Apatow called about a cameo in Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and talks reverentially about Saturday Night Live’s current cast (he co-stars with Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader in the upcoming Paul, and Jason Sudeikis in Horrible Bosses). After hosting the show in 2005, he even considered asking Lorne Michaels to let him join the cast for a year. “The comedy community is very friendly right now. I think that’s why you see all the synergy and people doing each other’s movies,” says Bateman, who hopes to get Aniston a role in the Arrested Development movie, slated for 2012. Either he was born twenty years too early—or the comedy world is catching up to him. “The new paradigm is to be talented and nice,” he says. “It’s considered a little rookie to be a douchebag.”

Join the Discussion

Read All Comments | Add Yours

Recent Comments On This Article


Related:

Advertising
Current Issue
Subscribe to New York
Subscribe

Give a Gift

Advertising