What Bill Murray learned from Bing, his 4-legged co-star in ‘The Friend'
A Great Dane named Bing stars in the new movie The Friend, which follows a woman (Naomi Watts) who must take ownership of a dog that her mentor (Bill Murray) leaves her after he dies.
What seems like a dark premise offered Watts and Murray a unique opportunity to bond with Bing, both on-screen and when the cameras weren't rolling. Watts told Yahoo Entertainment she had countless positive memories with her four-legged co-star.
"He's just pure, solid gold. Every day was a good day with him," she said. "You know what stands out, because it never really happened again? When he got a tummy ache from eating too many treats. That was the only time I saw him feeling low throughout the experience."
Murray has worked with animals many times in his career, and he told Yahoo Entertainment that what struck him about Bing was "that he's himself all the time."
"He's never anyone else. He's never another animal. ... He's true to his nature all the time, as opposed to a person, who can be one way, then another way, then 300 other ways. He's consistently there," he said. "You can look at him and go, 'OK, I want to be more like him ... where I'm actually the person who I believe I am.'"
That's not exactly easy for a human, though, which is what makes Bing so great to work with.
"To do that, I've got to sort of eliminate all the debris floating around in my head and my emotions to be inside my skin," Murray said.
Scott McGehee and David Siegel, who wrote and directed The Friend, told Yahoo Entertainment that they did a "massive search all over the country" to find Bing, who plays the fictional dog Apollo. They found him in Des Moines, Iowa.
"You could see in his face right away, he had an extremely soulful countenance and worked really well with Bill. The only hitch at the time was that he was a little too young,' McGehee said.
Bing was just two years old during the casting process, so he still had some of his puppy features, which wouldn't work for The Friend. But the movie was delayed because of the pandemic, giving Bing four years to grow into the role of Apollo.
"We just asked Bing to be Bing for the most part, and he was very good at that," McGehee said.
Warning: The Friend
The Friend is based on a 2018 novel of the same name by Sigrid Nunez. Nunez told McGehee and Siegel that the movie ends about one day before the book does. That's because in the movie, Apollo lives. In Nunez's novel, he dies.
In the process of making the movie, McGehee and Siegel discovered a website that people use to check and see if a book or movie contains the death of an animal: DoesTheDogDie.com. But before they knew about that forum, Siegel said they decided that it would seem like "just a drag if he died."
Siegel acknowledged, though, that plenty of movies involving dog death did just fine at the box office — I Am Legend and Marley & Me, to name a few. Books like Old Yeller and Where the Red Fern Grows include devastating death scenes, but those books are recommended to children.
McGehee and Siegel weren't sure if the age of social media has affected consumers' relationships to seeing dogs die on screen, or if the people who check to see if the dog dies before watching a movie would be the same ones to sit out on classic dog movies, just in case something bad happened.
Murray had a theory, though.
"I guess if you're not in the mood for it, you know, it's probably a safety measure," he said.
"If a dog dies in a movie, is that bad? Well, it's natural. It's sad is what it is. ... You don't want the dog to die, and you're going to cry when the dog dies," he continued. "These are lessons, you know. What do you do when the dog dies? You get another dog. ... What do you do when you lose the game? You play another one."
is in theaters nationwide on April 4.
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'You have to touch subjects that we probably haven't talked about since we were little kids, and to bring up childhood traumas, and why we got to this point and this size in the first place,' she says. 'It's emotional.' The show's premiere offers viewers a preview of what's to come, as Wallace struggles with mobility issues during a family trip to the pool. When Harris coaxes her friend into a trip to the beach, she fears how people might look at and treat her and decides to stay in the car. And when a friend shows Wallace a life expectancy calculator that suggests she might only have a few years to live if she does not change her lifestyle, she becomes terrified of what the loss would do to Nana. It's then that she decides to look into weight loss surgery — a journey Harris supports but, at least at the start of the series, does not want for herself. Wallace likens the entire TV journey to ripping off a Band-Aid. 'You basically have to heal on camera,' she says. The good news? She and Harris are both strong by nature. When they finish a scene and notice crew members crying, she says, they'll often be the ones pushing production to keep going. In talking with these best friends, it's easy to see the strength and comfort they've found in one another — and not just because they're both Scorpios. For both women, this friendship has offered a new level of understanding and support. They can see and hold one another in ways each of them had not experienced before. 'I have siblings, but I lost a sibling young, and my other siblings, I don't talk to at all, so it's really cool,' Harris says. 'I've never experienced having a sister, and we can share clothes.' For Wallace, the friendship feels like the first time she's been truly supported. Although Harris had made sure earlier in the interview to avoid putting words in her friend's mouth, Wallace, the perpetual mother hen, went ahead and said it: Harris became 'one of the first friends I ever had that made me feel like she wasn't using me. Everything just felt so genuine with her.' At the end of the day, Wallace says, she appreciates what she and Harris have, 'just being able to vibe with each other, laugh with each other, cry with each other, be there for each other, defend each other.' Like any roommates, they 'do get on each other's nerves,' Wallace admits. But at the same time, she says, they know each other well enough to know when one of them is having a bad day and needs a little extra empathy. Each of them has bonded with the other's family, and most importantly, Nana loves and adores Harris — which is crucial because 'I don't let anybody around my child,' Wallace says. The pair share what Wallace calls an 'unbreakable bond.' We should all be so lucky to find that kind of friendship.