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Jai Courtney

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![](http://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/56c346b607eaa09d9189a870/1487267505836-BDYQVE4I9PAPLYMX27UI/Look-32.jpg)  BACK SEAM POCKET T-SHIRT BY **AG** AND DENIM PANTS BY **KILL CITY**. ![](http://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/56c346b607eaa09d9189a870/1487267476248-EKK6GUSEVVFL5AHW3KLR/Look-1-a.jpg) DOUBLE-BREASTED PEA COAT BY **VIVIENNE WESTWOOD MAN** AND TWO TIER DROP TAIL BUTTON-UP SHIRT BY **ASHTON MICHAEL**. ![](http://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/56c346b607eaa09d9189a870/1487267478146-WP3OJT2P326RXXCHHNBP/Look-22.jpg) LEATHER BIKER JACKET BY **G-STAR**, CREWNECK WASHED T-SHIRT BY **GUESS,** AVIATOR CLASSIC SUNGLASSES BY **RAY-BAN**. [](#)[](#) Jai Courtney Is This Fortune-Free Paper Stock? When I meet Jai Courtney he is slouching on a couch in a small back room at Smashbox Studios in Los Angeles. He is wearing a flannel and sneakers, but his hair is precision-parted and lacquered like Clark Gable's. He flagrantly smokes his rolled cigarettes indoors. “It started out kind of industrial,” he says, of his _Flaunt_ photoshoot. “And then shit got dapper.” Courtney’s shit is about to get permanently dapper, judging by the current trajectory of his career. The 27-year-old Australian actor has already played Tom Cruise’s antagonist and Bruce Willis’ son (in _Jack Reacher_ and _A Good Day to Die Hard_, respectively), and he has at least four high- profile film projects on deck for 2014, including the fantasy-action movie _I, Frankenstein_ and the adaptation of the bestselling young-adult science-fiction series _Divergent_. He has also proven appealing to A-list actors directing large-scale period dramas; he’ll be in Angelina Jolie’s _Unbroken_ and Russell Crowe’s _The Water Diviner_ this year. Courtney is truly poised on a brink—his future seems full of excitement and uncertainty, in a “you’ve got to wear shades” sort of way. To peer beyond the unknowns and glimpse his fate, I resort to schoolyard clairvoyance: I play MASH with Jai Courtney. MASH is a game traditionally played by elementary school kids with paper and pencil. One player compiles a list of four grownup potentialities in several categories—their possible jobs, pets, spouses. A number is arbitrarily determined, and players count down the lists, crossing off each item that corresponds with that pre-determined number, until only one possibility is left in each list. I’m worried that Australian children do not play MASH, but luckily Courtney is familiar with the game, and, more importantly, down to discover his future. “Let’s do it,” he says, “Let’s play MASH.” **Careers** 1\. Actor \[I guess it’s no surprise that this is what Courtney wants to be when he grows up.\] 2. Fireman \[Courtney tried to get in the MASH spirit and channel his inner grade schooler with this answer. And even more with the next one.\] 3. Tiger \[“You know, as a kid, I always wanted to be a tiger.”\] 4. Musician \[I ask Courtney what he would like to do now if he weren’t an actor. “I play music,” he says. “But I’d never have the talent to do it professionally.”\] Courtney has played a lot of tough guys and soldiers—he was a gladiator in the STARZ series _Spartacus: Blood and Sand_, an assassin run amok in _Jack Reacher_, and the leader of the gargoyle army in _I, Frankenstein_. As such, he’s learned to accept some level of typecasting. “I think there’s wisdom in playing to your strengths. When you’re starting out, there’s a lot of idealism. It’s like, ‘I could play a scientist,’” he says, putting on his best bright-eyed and bushy-tailed face. But now that Courtney’s star is rising, he’s trying to find a balance between playing to his action-dude type and showing more sides of his personality and talent. He has good role models in Willis, Cruise, and Crowe, all of whom are legitimate action stars who have branched way out. “I definitely look to those guys for their longevity,” Courtney said. “I want to be doing this for a long, long time.” Talking to Courtney, I am struck by how open, smart, and down-to-earth he is—he comes across as so _normal_. “Choosing between roles is a privilege I’ve never really had before,” he says, speaking as an actor who is genuinely surprised by his fortune. He’s realistic about his career—and his “type,” and the luck he’s had—that it seems unlikely that his star will fizzle out in some hubristic flash. He’ll soldier on. **Pets** 1\. Dog \[Courtney: “I have dogs now. I will always have dogs.” Later, when I read his fortune and tell him he will not be owning a dog, he is defiant. “We’ll see about that.”\] 2. Macaw \[Despite his practical first answer, Courtney’s dream pets tend toward the exotic.\] 3. Snake 4. Tiger \[Me: “So you could be a tiger who owns a tiger?” Courtney is unfazed by the possibility_._\] **Cities** 1\. New York 2. Melbourne 3. London 4. Rio When the travel slows and Courtney returns to Australia, he’s like a kid coming home from college. “I’m definitely depending on other people.
I don’t have a place there,” he says. “I don’t have a vehicle.” But his roots in Sydney are very strong. “Me and my high school mates are so close. We’re like brothers.” Courtney has been lucky in his recent projects to get to work in Australia—both Jolie’s _Unbroken_ and Crowe’s _The Water Diviner_ are filming there. “I’ve always admired \[Crowe\] as an actor,” Courtney says. “I’m excited to see him in the director’s seat. He’s definitely smart, and he has an understanding of story.” Crowe is one of Australia’s most brilliant and successful exports to the American movie machine, and _The Water Diviner_ is what Courtney calls “an Australian story.” This is an interesting progression in his own career—it might be his chance not only to work with Crowe, but also to branch out from Hollywood and contribute to
a true Australian cinema. **Wives** “You have to fill this one out for me,” Courtney says. “You can’t think of anyone?” I ask him. “Dude, there are so many,” he says. “So many.” 1. Sarah Palin \[To raise the stakes, Courtney lists the worst possible outcome.\] 2. Beyoncé \[I had suggested Rihanna. “She’s hot. But let’s do Beyoncé.”\] 3. April from the _Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles_ \[I suggested a fictional character from our late-ʼ80s childhoods—maybe Jem? Courtney instantly vetoed that idea. “Gem is my ex girlfriend’s name,” he says sheepishly. Presumably he meant Australian actress Gemma Pranita, who he dated for eight years. We settle on the _Ninja Turtles_’ friend April, whose name holds no complicated personal associations for Courtney.\] 4. Kate Upton \[Me: “A model?” Courtney: “I’m not really up on the current models.” Me: “Kate Upton?” Courtney: “Yeah. She’s hot.” Easy enough.\] **Number of Kids** 1\. 2 2. 16 3. 0 4. 4 In _Divergent_, Courtney plays Eric, the hard-ass leader of the societal “faction” that the main character, Tris Prior, is joining. “I was a bit reluctant to do a character who’s back in that macho zone,” Courtney says of his only kid-friendly project to date. “But it is a brilliant story centered on a great young, strong, female character, which I don’t think we see enough of these days.” It’s hard to overlook how far removed this conversation about the young adult film franchise is from Courtney’s own youth in Sydney, studying acting at the prestigious Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts. “There are certain theaters in Sydney that I used to look at and think, if you acted on that stage, you’d made it.” Courtney is and has been focused on his future success, but he no longer has to be now that we’ve determined his destiny: to be
a tiger who is married to April from the _Ninja Turtles_, living in an apartment in London with zero children and a snake for a pet. _Photographer_: Davis Factor for Artmixcreative.com. _Stylist_: Cat Wennekamp for artmixbeauty.com. _Groomer_: Helen Robertson for celestineagency.com. _Photography_ _Assistant_: Brad Lansill. Grooming Notes: Man Pro-Energizing massive moisturizer by **Givenchy**, eye balm by **Jack Black**, and purify toning water by **Nude Skincare**.