Skip to main content

Hollywood talent discuss answering the Call of Duty, Modern Warfare 3 style

Taking advantage of its Los Angeles location, Activision has once again enlisted Hollywood talent to breathe life into virtual heroes in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3. Hollywood film composer Brian Tyler (The Expendables, Fast Five) enhances the on-screen action with an epic score, while actors Timothy Olyphant (Justified, Hitman), William Fichtner (Drive Angry, The Dark Knight), Billy Murray (Captain John Price from the Modern Warfare series, Essex Boys) and Bruce Greenwood (Thirteen Days, Star Trek) spent days in the recording studio to bring the central characters in the campaign mode to life.

Getting actors on board the most successful video game franchise today wasn’t very difficult for developers Infinity Ward and Sledgehammer Games. In the case of Greenwood, all they had to do was ask him to play Overlord.

Recommended Videos

“I was only familiar with video games in the most peripheral way because I don’t play them and they just didn’t penetrate my world,” said Greenwood. “I didn’t realize how compelling they were. It’s like when you’re ignorant about something, you just don’t think about it that much. I used to think, ‘Oh video games, so what?’ I didn’t know jack about games and as soon as I got introduced to them, I realized, ‘No wonder it’s so intoxicating.’ Now I’m going to have to carve enough time out of my life to actually get involved in them because they’re so fun. I really need another thing in my life to suck two hours out of the day.”

Fichtner, who just wrapped the submarine movie Phantom with Call of Duty: Black Ops star and Academy Award nominee Ed Harris, has watched as more and more talented actors have migrated to games.

“Ed Harris is such a gentleman and people just love him in the games,” said Fichtner. “It dawned on me when we were shooting the film, that [it’s] not so much that it’s any slap on my own back, but it does make sense to go out and find really talented on-camera actors that know how to play a moment. They know how to figure out a story, but most of all know how to play a moment of a situation. I could be in a scene with Ed Harris and throw him a left curve and I’m going to tell you something, you’re not going to shake Ed Harris. He’s going to come back at you with something that’s absolutely 100-percent appropriate for the moment.”

Having played Sergeant First Class Jeff Sanderson in Ridley Scott’s Blackhawk Down, Fichtner, who trained with Delta Force soldiers for that film, isn’t surprised that Call of Duty is popular with the Armed Forces.

“That doesn’t surprise me because the game just feels so incredibly real,” said Fichtner. “I know that the consultants for the game are drawing from the real world and that’s what makes it so shocking to a guy like me who’s never set a foot in that world. On a set you can set up some kind of heavy battle scene that takes a couple of days or a week to shoot and you feel the bombs going off and you do it piece by piece by piece. In this game, you die and then you’re down the rabbit hole.”

Greenwood has a lot of nephews, so he understands the culture surrounding Call of Duty, especially the online game.

“Ultimately, a lot of these players become fighter pilots and sh*t like that,” said Greenwood, who is currently filming Robert Zemeckis’ Flight with Denzel Washington.

Greenwood said that while there may be some reluctance to admit it, Hollywood recognizes that videogames are big entertainment. This is especially true with the Call of Duty franchise, which has consistently topped global sales of over $1 billion over the past few years with each annual iteration.

All of this success has impacted the lives of those actors who have been along for the Modern Warfare ride since the beginning, including Billy Murray, who has been portraying Captain Price since Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare.

“Lots of people recognize my voice right off and if they don’t, when they find I was in the games then they recognize my voice,” said Murray. “For instance, when I came over from England to do Call of Duty XP, I’d hired the cheapest car there was at LAX and this woman (at the rental car agency) asked me why I was in LA and I told her I was an actor and I was in town for a game. She asked what game and when I told her Call of Duty she went very quiet. She didn’t say a word. She just picked the phone up, dialed a number and asked me to speak to her son. The son asked if he could come over and if I’d wait. I couldn’t because of my schedule, but I said I’d meet him when I came back on my next trip. The lady looked at me and said I’d booked the cheapest car, so she upgraded me to a 4×4 for an extra $10 a day and it should have been $40 a day. So there are perks to being Captain Price.”

There are other perks, as well. One of which is immortality, playing a character that will become part of entertainment history.

“When I had the opportunity to do this game over the summertime, all I remember is when they first called and told me it’s one of the lead guys,” said Fichtner. “They had some art to show me, and I said, ‘Thanks, you make me look really good.’ I love the poster with the Sandman on it.”

Gamers will be hearing a lot from these actors starting November 8th when Activision unleashes the latest installment from Infinity Ward and Sledgehammer Games at retailers worldwide.

John Gaudiosi
Former Digital Trends Contributor
John Gaudiosi has been covering video games for over 25 years, dating back to his work for The Washington Post while in…
One of Call of Duty: Warzone’s biggest maps is going open-source
An overhead view of the Caldera Warzone map but it's been stripped of color in a development program.

Activision announced that it's releasing open-source data for the Call of Duty: Warzone Caldera map, which is one of the largest in-game data sets released from the franchise, and will allow players to use it in their own projects.

The data set is what's referred to as a Universal Scene Description (USD), which allows for large-scale, detailed 3D simulations of things like the Caldera map. The data, which includes most of the "geometry" of Caldera along with some in-game character pathing that shows how players move, will be available in OpenUSD (the open-source industry standard for this kind of tech) on Wednesday.

Read more
Xbox Game Pass is getting its first Call of Duty game
A soldier with a shotgun pointing to shoot in Modern Warfare 3.

Xbox isn't waiting until Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 to get a Call of Duty game on Game Pass. The company announced Tuesday that 2023's Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 will be added to the service on Wednesday, July 24.

The announcement was heavily rumored beforehand, with reports from outlets like Insider Gaming, but it was made official on Xbox Wire. Xbox confirmed that the game will be hitting Game Pass for Console, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Ultimate (so every old tier ahead of the upcoming price hike), and it will include most modes, including single-player and the more open-world Zombies mode. It doesn't appear to include Warzone, the series' battle royale spinoff, although that's free to play.

Read more
How to join the Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 beta
A squad stands together in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6.

This year, Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 is really pushing the single-player campaign in its marketing. Set in the early 1990s, this story promises all the twists, turns, betrayals, and mind-blowing reveals the series is known for. But for a majority of players, that's just an afterthought compared to the competitive multiplayer. After the Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Direct showed off the new movement systems and reworked Prestige progression, players are itching to get their hands on the latest and greatest in multiplayer first-person shooter action. October 25 isn't that far off, but it's long enough to make the wait agonizing. Like every year, however, Activision is giving everyone the chance to get some matches in before launch with a beta test. Gaining access is easy, but only if you know how.
How to join the Black Ops 6 beta

The only way to reserve your slot in the Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 beta is to preorder a copy of the game on the platform of your choice, be it PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, or PC. There are two versions available to preorder via the official Call of Duty site -- Standard/Cross-gen and Vault -- but it doesn't matter which one you purchase. Also, if you are a Game Pass subscriber, then you do not need to preorder to join the beta. If you preordered a physical copy, you will get a code that you can redeem at callofduty.com/betaredeem to gain access to the beta when it launches. Digital owners will automatically gain access on their platform.

Read more