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Joaquin Phoenix NEW YORK — He may confront extraterrestrial activity in the supernatural thriller Signs, but on this hot summer afternoon, actor Joaquin Phoenix is battling demons of a different sort. "Sorry that I'm so out of breath," he says. "I've been mopping the floor and cleaning my place, because my mom's coming into town tomorrow. I have to make it mom-ready." Family has always been the cornerstone of Phoenix's life. And it's an issue he deals with in M. Night Shyamalan's paranormal psycho-drama Signs, opening nationwide Friday. Phoenix, 27, plays Mel Gibson's bummed-out brother, a role he landed 10 days before shooting started. And like his character, Phoenix has a few hang-ups of his own. "I'm afraid of flying and try to avoid it," he says. "I tap planes before I get into them. But luckily, I don't have to fly that much. But when I do, I just suffer through it and keep the flights short and direct." Perhaps his desire to stay grounded is a response to Phoenix's unconventional childhood. The actor, raised by free-spirited Christian missionary parents (now separated), grew up in Puerto Rico, Venezuela and Mexico. Today, he's a resident of downtown Manhattan, where he's neighbors with his younger sister and fellow thespian Summer. And while Phoenix may be drawn to playing doomed dimwits on the big screen, in person the actor is down to earth, with a droll sense of humor. "If you just made a movie about a guy that walked around a lot, talked to his friends and played on the computer, that would be me," he says. He declines to discuss his personal life, but he's dating a South African woman named Topaz. Phoenix, whose parents encouraged all their children to go into acting, got his start in 1986's Space Camp but broke through as the confused, hostile teenage son with a penchant for pornography in Ron Howard's 1989 comedy Parenthood. He was off to a promising start. But faced with a dearth of quality scripts, Phoenix gave Hollywood the boot. It was during his hiatus that Phoenix was thrust back into the limelight with the hysterical 911 call he made outside Los Angeles' Viper Room on Halloween night 1993, as his older brother River lay dying next to him of a drug overdose. The frantic call was broadcast worldwide. In 1995, Phoenix returned to movies to play a hapless high school killer opposite Nicole Kidman in To Die For. Even as he lands meatier roles in ever bigger movies, Phoenix says he lives in the here and now, and has no grand aspirations to direct the great American movie or star in one. He'd like to work on a film with his three siblings, all of whom are rooted in showbiz, and his best friend Casey Affleck, Ben's younger brother. |