In the fact-based film, Bleed For This, cocky Rhode Island boxer Vinny Pazienza (Miles Teller) takes a brutal beating from Junior Welterweight Champion Roger Mayweather in 1988. After his humiliating loss, fight promoter Lou Duva (Ted Levine) urges him to retire. Instead, Pazienza moves up two weight classes under the guidance of his new trainer Kevin Rooney (Aaron Eckhart). Rooneyâs radical strategy pays off when Pazienza, 14 pounds heavier, takes down French boxer Gilbert DelĂ© in front of a hometown crowd to become Super Middleweight champion of the world.
Pazienza doesnât have much time to relish the victory, however. Shortly after the bout, a head-on car crash leaves him with a broken neck. Initially told he may never walk again, doctors recommend spinal fusion surgery that would guarantee mobility but effectively end his boxing career. Pazienza chooses the far riskier âhaloâ spine-stabilization treatment, requiring him to wear a circular metal brace screwed directly into his skull for six months.
Recovering in the modest home he shares with his fiercely devoted father Angelo (CiarĂĄn Hinds) and anxious mother Louise (Katey Sagal), Pazienza secretly starts weight training in the basement with the help of a reluctant Rooney and begins to recover both emotionally and physically. 13 months after the accident, the man fondly known as âThe Pazmanian Devilâ returns to the ring to do battle with Super Middleweight Champion Roberto Duran (Edwin Rodriguez) in the biggest fight of his life.
Miles Teller is one of the hottest 20-something actors working today due to his deft navigation of the blockbuster film world (the Divergent series) and the indie film world (Whiplash). After his starring role as David Packouz in the terrific, and also fact-based, War Dogs, heâs playing his second real life character in row. Teller and Aaron Eckhart are the anchors of the film and both had physical challenges. Teller had to buff up while Eckhart had to fatten up.
âBoth roles are pretty brutal, but at the end, I have a six pack. Itâs not the worst thing in the world. As a young actor, youâre not going to get asked too much to put on weight for a role, but I had a couple of older actors tell me that if a director ever wants you to out on eight for a role, donât do it. You have to lose it afterwards and itâs rough.â
The physical transformation, however, was a challenged that Teller gladly chose to accept.
âIâve always liked it when I watched an actor I had seen in something else and he was doing an accent or he had a prosthetic or he did something with his body. I felt it was time for me to challenge myself in that way. I did a lot of things that were more in my comfort zone. With this, I was very, very nervous. It was around two years ago and I was in fun friend shape, which is what I like to call it. I had been the funny friend in some movies. This was before Whiplash had come out. I didnât have a ton of traction yet, so I knew this was an incredible opportunity.â
Whenever we challenge ourselves to step outside our comfort zones, we always learn something about ourselves in the process. Though he didnât get specific, the fact this Tellerâs uncle also had to wear a halo after a spinal injury had to have an effect on him.
âVinny was risking paralysis from the neck down. They said if [this vertebra] moves at all, your bodyâs not going to heal and youâre going to be paralyzed. For him to have that risk and to still say, âwell I know me better than anyone here. Iâm going to come back from this.â To be able to explore that, youâre going to learn some things about yourself. Though it wasnât actually screwed into my head, it had to be tight enough so it wouldnât move. It didnât matter what you did in the take, if it moved a quarter inch, you can use it. They put little rubber pieces on the end and got it as tight as we could. With Vinny, heâs not just sitting around. Heâs moving. Heâs going to casinos. Heâs going to strip clubs. Heâs working out. Itâs frustrating because youâre so stiff and youâre in it for 12 hours a day.â
Thereâs always an added pressure when an actor portrays a real person. Thereâs an even greater pressure when that person is still alive. Teller wasnât immune to the pressure. Though he did most of his homework by researching YouTube videos, itâs another thing entirely to meet your character in person.
âBy the time I met Vinny, he wasnât the same person was he was then. Heâs 25 years older now. He talks differently. I remember thinking at first that I wouldnât want him on set because that would be weird and I would be so intimidated. Iâm just an actor pretending to be this bad ass that you really are. One we got on set and I saw Aaron and Katey and Ciaran and the sets and the costumes, it all just felt so real that I wanted him on set. In a weird way, I wanted him to see his life from 25 years ago. Having seen Vinnyâs reaction after having seen the film, I know we captured his life.â
Any actor worth his or her salt doesnât want to be typecast. Teller mentioned that he had some roles as the âfun friend,â however, he didnât want to play the fun friend forever and, thanks to director Ben Youngerâs keen eye, Teller was able to break away from the fun friend mold in a big way.
âI want to play a ton of different characters, but it takes someone having the foresight and taking a leap of faith with you. When Ben cast me, he cast me based off The Spectacular Now. I played a high school kid in that movie. For him to see that and say, âhe can play Vinny Paz.â I can guarantee if a studio was making this film, I would not have been on their top ten list. Iâm very thankful for Ben. I knew it would be a challenge. And I knew people would say,âoh really? Miles Teller was cast?â Maybe theyâll still say that. I knew it was a time to grow. I was also looking at other actors had done at age 27. Sean Penn comes to mind. Leo was doing some interesting stuff. It was time to take the training wheels off.â
And take off the training wheels he has. His upcoming roles will leave his fun friend big screen persona even further in the rear view mirror.
âTwo I did earlier this year werenât exactly romantic comedies. One is called Thank You for Your Service. Itâs based on the follow-up book to Good Soldiers. It follows soldiers coming back from the search in Iraq in 2007. Out movie takes place after they get off the plane and the transition they make. We showcase PTSD. We donât tiptoe around it. We show these guys at the VA. 22 vets a day commit suicide. It needs to be talked about more. I also did this firefighting movie [Granite Mountain] that takes place three years ago, the Yarnell Hill tragedy [in Prescott, Arizona] where 19 of the 20 firefighters passed away. Itâs the first movie that puts wildlife firefighters on the screen. Theyâre called Hot Shots. I got to know that community. I embraced them and they embraced me. I got to know these guys. Theyâre incredible, real unsung heroes.â
Bleed For This opens in theaters November 18th.