Men's Health Australia

HARD MAN, HARD LESSONS

UNLESS YOU'RE THE owner of a Carrollian-grade imagination, you'd struggle to picture Matt Nable in a romcom. Could you see him as the Owen Wilson character in Wedding Crashers? Or the Hugh Grant character in Notting Hill? Broad comedy, as far as we know, isn't Nable's bag. But you know what is, right? Menace. Suppressed rage. Melancholy. Dark secrets. Desperation. Few actors can nail those as believably and seemingly effortlessly as this guy does.

Take his turn in the new Australian film Transfusion (out 5 January in cinemas and streaming on Stan from 20 January), in which he plays Johnny, a former SAS soldier who's slid into the criminal underworld and sets about dragging his mate Ryan (Sam Worthington) in with him. Nable's performance amounts to a 106-min. nervous breakdown.

Now, in real time, there on my computer screen, is Nable's square-jawed, ruggedly handsome face. He's doing the rounds promoting Transfusion, which he also wrote and directed, and while he looks every bit the bloke you wouldn't mess with – unsmiling, beefy, tattooed – his tone is friendly, almost gentle, to the point where I feel I can tell him that I didn't much care for his character of Johnny.

“Look,” he says, “as an actor, you don't have to like the characters you play: you just have to understand them.” He goes on to say that he understood Johnny very well, that he's known many a returned serviceman who's felt marginalised and emasculated by society. “I didn't dislike Johnny either,” he adds. “Johnny is a good guy…

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Men's Health Australia

Men's Health Australia1 min read
“Jiu-jitsu Improves Character. It's A Metaphor For Life.”
I STUDIED BUSINESS at uni, made the board of Specsavers at 31 and got into the corporate lifestyle: dinners and drinks. When I found out my now ex-wife was pregnant, I wanted to get in shape. So, I went to my local MMA (mixed martials arts) gym. I'd
Men's Health Australia8 min read
A Quiet Place
For my first outing as Men's Health's Adventurist, I was tasked with tackling an ultra-distance duathlon. The country was in the grip of its first pandemic lockdown at the time, so I had to rack up the obscene kilometre count using a stationary bike
Men's Health Australia5 min read
Meditation, But Funny
IMAGINE YOU OPEN the guided-meditation app on your phone and press play on the daily insight. You hear an electric piano and a female voice, smooth as butter. “Wherever you may be right now,” she says, “just take a moment to acknowledge that at least

Related Books & Audiobooks