He has only a few lines, things like "You will lose,"
"I will break you," "You're dead." And those are
barely intelligible grunts.
He has two facial expressions - stony and fierce.
But Swedish actor Dolph Lundgren is counting on his role as the
Soviet boxer in Rocky IV to make him a show-business knockout.
Lundgren - all 6 feet, 6 inches and 240 pounds of him - plays Ivan
Drago, Rocky's super-strong opponent in the latest battle in the Rocky
wars.
The
system is evil
Drago is no simple blockhead. Lundgren is convinced that his Soviet
superpower differs from Rocky's previous opponents, Apollo Creed and
Clubber Lang (played by Carl Weathers and Mr. T, respectively). He's got
brains and feelings, not to mention a body.
"This guy,' says Lundgren, 26, "his heart isn't evil. The
system that uses him is evil."
Anyway, Lundgren isn't about to be typecast forever as a
"meatball," which is one reason why he is spending three
months traveling the world giving interviews to any and all.
"My character," he says, "you can't penetrate him. You
can't say, 'That's Dolph Lundgren playing the Russian.’ That's why I
have to go out, to show I'm not really that character."
Speaks
four languages
A karate black belt and former European and Australian kick-boxing
champion, Lundgren abandoned a Fulbright scholarship in chemical
engineering at MIT to become an actor (he made a brief debut appearance
in May in A View to a Kill). He speaks lour languages. In person,
he is soft-spoken and articulate and no dumb palooka.
He knows what he is selling. Right now, action films are popular, and
Lundgren wants in on the action. "If you're physical and have a
body, why not use it?" he says. "It's like anything else: if
you have a good left jab, why hit with the right?"
Already, Lundgren - soon to be immortalized in the form of plastic
Drago dolls - has been offered roles in other action-adventure films,
playing characters ranging from "cartoons to serious
contemporary" men.
But, like most everyone else in Hollywood these days, he is writing
his own scripts and has formed his own company, Dolphin Productions, to
develop projects for himself. One, called Interstate 10, is an
on-the-road movie starring Lundgren and his fiancée actress-singer
Grace Jones (formerly of Syracuse).
Fashion
tips
Jones is best known for her height (5-foot-11), her brief animal-skin
garments and her snarling, androgynous stage presence, but Lundgren
wants to show her off as a "bombshell," a "Marilyn
Monroe."
She has given Lundgren fashion advice, helping him find his sense of
style. For a recent interview, he was wearing a white, wide-wale
corduroy suit by Kenzo, a blue shirt and matching blue suede shoes.
"It's all part of the image,' he says. "In the old days,
the studios did it for the stars. They put their whole power behind the
stars. Now, there's no such thing as the studio system, so you have to
do it yourself."