TORONTO – “Zac Efron, Oscar nominee” could be an actual thing.
The star of the upcoming war dramedy “The Greatest Beer Run Ever” finds his character forced into foxholes and bunkers in Vietnam, a fish out of water with a bag of Pabst Blue Ribbon amid battle. And that’s when the former “High School Musical” heartthrob captures a gravitas that might make Academy voters pay attention.
Those scenes also were the most natural for Efron. “In the purest sense, it really took the acting part out. I didn’t have to really pretend,” the actor tells USA TODAY a few hours before the world premiere of “Beer Run” at Toronto International Film Festival. That surrounding sense of war is “ingrained in me visually. I’ve never experienced anything like that. It felt real. I got a little taste of what it might have been like.”
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Directed by Peter Farrelly and based on the real-life exploits of John “Chickie” Donohue in the late 1960s, “Beer Run” (in theaters and streaming on Apple TV+ Sept. 30) stars Efron as a New Yorker thinking about his buddies from the neighborhood serving as soldiers in Vietnam. With public sentiment leaning negative about the war, Chickie decides to go on an epic adventure: take beer cans from the local bar and travel overseas to deliver them personally to his friends. Of course, they think he’s out of his mind, and Chickie discovers how dangerous the situation really is.
Ted Bundy in 2019’s “Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile,” “there’s some added value in taking it seriously,” says Efron, 34. “At the front of your mind is definitely the importance of portraying the character so that Chickie himself will enjoy it and that it’s something that his family would enjoy and be proud of and that’s honest and truthful by their accounts. That becomes very, very important.”
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Efron credits Farrelly’s writing as a big help, “weaving this very emotional, somewhat serious but also humorous undertone (with) potentially dark subject matter. And he just is better than anyone I’ve ever seen do it. I knew this was the right place to take this chance.”
“Beer Run” is the second dramatic effort from Efron this year: He also starred in the indie survival thriller “Gold,” a transformative role that turned his leading-man looks into a grotesque mass of sunburned flesh. “I really enjoy trying things outside of my comfort zone,” Efron says. “I love this craft.”
Farrelly’s last film, 2018’s “Green Book,” received two Academy Awards acting nominations (and a supporting actor win for Mahershala Ali). With Toronto being a major launching pad for potential Oscar runs, “Beer Run” gives Efron a real spotlight for his acting range.
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If the Academy comes knocking at his door? “I’d probably call the police,” Efron jokes. “We’re about to be raided. Am I being kicked out of the country?” When it comes to awards, he doesn’t really think about it too much: “I love the idea of reaching high and trying to make fantastic films and elevating. So anything that happens outside of that is a byproduct of what you really love to do.
“It’d be interesting (to be nominated), but really, the goal here is we made a cool movie that we’re passionate about. That’s mission accomplished.”
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Although Farrelly doesn’t stress much about awards season either, the director “would love” to see Efron garner strong Oscar consideration “because he deserves it. His performance is impeccable.” Efron reminds him of John Travolta in “Saturday Night Fever”: “He’s a flawed character who does some things wrong, but he always means well, his heart’s in the right place and he’s really easy to love.”
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