âBeing a part of an iconic brand, I was a little hesitant, because I donât really know how to sell shit, you know what I mean?â Washington tells me, chuckling. But the process of working with Simsâin addition to the generally nebulous premise of marketing something as abstract as a scentâturned out to be more of âtrying to embody a vibe,â which felt closer to filmmaking than heâd expected.
âIt felt more like weâre filming a movie-slash-documentary, in a way,â he said. âThis just feels like weâre creating something. I perked up with that. That was my kind of language.â
Sims and Washington envisioned the actorâs role here as a character whoâs feeling burnt out by the bizâbe it the Hollywood grind or life in the big cityâand gets in touch with nature to find his artistry again. It helped, of course, that shooting the campaign took place in the real-life nature of Big Sur.
âIt wasnât like weâre on a soundstage. We didnât fake it. It wasnât a green screen. We were there. We were in the natural locations, which a lot of studio films donât even do,â Washington says. If viewers were to watch the Bois Pacifique commercial as if it were a movie trailer, he hopes his character would pique their curiosity.
âWho is this gentleman with a beard and braids in the woods? What is this about? This is a cool concept,â the actor says. âI think thatâs kind of what we were going for, and itâs something new for Tom Ford.â
Being back among the California redwoods, Washington found himself getting lost in a few takes. At times, the experience verged on therapeutic.
âThere was one set up we had, I was literally hugging a tree, and circling it, and touching it, and connecting,â he recalls, laughing. âIt was like I was tripping on shrooms or something, and I wasnâtâtotally professionalâbut as we kept doing take after take, and David [Sims]âs calm, podcast, sleeping-app voice kept repeating like, âJust keep going, just keep feeling it, find it,â I was in a trance in a way. I felt like I was getting hypnotized by the allure of what nature brings. This natural connectivity to something very primal, and something very internal, and something maybe ancestral.â
That residual tranquility may come handy in the coming months. Itâs been a busy season for the Washingtons, with John David and his brother Malcolm collaborating on the August Wilson adaptation The Piano Lesson, while their father may well make an Oscars run for his scene-stealing turn as ornate schemer Macrinus opposite Paul Mescal in Ridley Scottâs Gladiator II.
âItâs been amazing to see how the people are receiving what Malcolm did [with The Piano Lesson] and how theyâre receiving Danielle Deadwylerâs performance,â he says. Plus, âI am excited for my father. Itâs a great achievement. You know, hopefully it all works out because he was incredible in Gladiator II, and heâs been incredible consistently throughout the decades. So itâs not that surprising, but it is nice when he gets properly recognized.â
Speaking of Denzel, John David had a more straightforward response than the elder Washington did when asked for his favorite Stanley Kubrick film:âIâll go with Clockwork Orange for now, because that shit is amazing.â