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BOARDMAN NATIVE LEONE MARUCCI’S FILM ‘Power of Few’ actor enjoys change of pace

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Staff and wire report

NEW ORLEANS

Comedian and actor Anthony Anderson sheds his funnyman persona to play a gun-wielding thug in “The Power of Few,” an independent action-drama film written and directed by Boardman native Leone Marucci.

The film opened Friday in New Orleans, Baton Rouge, La., and Los Angeles, and will expand to Philadelphia and Boulder, Colo., this week.

It premiered Feb. 15 in Tinseltown in Boardman and at a theater in Columbus.

Anderson, star of the NBC sitcom “Guys With Kids,” told The Associated Press the main reason he took the part was its departure from the comedic roles for which he’s known. But there was another draw: It meant a return to New Orleans, where Anderson lived for a short while after Hurricane Katrina when working on the Fox detective drama “K-Ville,” a post- Katrina series set in New Orleans that aired in 2007 and ’08.

“Any chance I have to get back to New Orleans, I jump at it,” Anderson said. “I found a love for the city and a love and affinity for the people there.”

Anderson is part of the film’s eclectic cast, which also includes Christopher Walken, Christian Slater, Jesse Bradford and New Orleans native rapper Juvenile.

“My character is a man of the streets,” Anderson said. “There’s a code in the streets that you don’t snitch. Someone was testifying against a friend, and my character wants to send him a message so that he doesn’t testify.”

The story line is one of several unfolding at the same time. Other story lines include a teenage boy desperate to get medicine he can’t afford for his infant sibling; a woman on a mission to deliver a mysterious package to an even more mysterious recipient; and two detectives resorting to torture to solve a crime.

“It’s really about karma and choices and consequences,” Anderson said. “It’s about how every choice we make has consequences, good, bad or indifferent.”

The film is part mystery, with a dose of religious conspiracy surrounding the Shroud of Turin — a centuries-old linen cloth that bears the image of a crucified man that millions believe to be Jesus of Nazareth.

Walken’s character, an insightful homeless man named Doke, delivers a monologue referencing the shroud during a pivotal moment in the film. It was a performance Walken said was “challenging” but one he wanted to get right.

Walken said filming gave him his first chance to visit New Orleans. He said that during breaks in shooting, he took walks in the French Quarter and watched cargo ships and paddlewheel boats maneuver the winding Mississippi River outside his hotel window.

“I hoped that I could be good in it,” he said. “If you’re an actor, you take parts as they come to you. When you read the script, you ask yourself, can I be good at it, and sometimes you’re right, sometimes you’re wrong.”

Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.