Whiskey goes well with "Crazy Heart" Jeff Bridges

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - To hear veteran actor Jeff Bridges tell it, he had the time of his life in his new movie "Crazy Heart" playing a drunk -- and so far, no bad hangover.

"I''m very excited about its success," Bridges told Reuters recently. "Sometimes you just have fun making it, and that''s happened on several films. But on this one, I hit it all. I had a great time making it, and I love the way it turned out."

Bridges, whose father is the late screen star Lloyd Bridges and brother is actor Beau Bridges, has been nominated for several awards, including a Golden Globe, for his portrayal of down-on-his-luck country singer Bad Blake in "Crazy Heart."

A four-time Oscar nominee, Bridges got a little help on his latest movie from his friend, the composer T-Bone Burnett, who wrote much of the music for the independent film.

First-time filmmaker Scott Cooper said he fashioned his tale after the lives of outlaw country singers like Waylon Jennings and Merle Haggard, who enjoyed monster hits but also played their share of dive bars and honky tonks.

But the movie''s success -- it earns a 90 percent positive rating at rottentomatoes.com, which collects and scores reviews -- has been less about the tale, and more about Bridges'' work.

"It''s a mark of how fine a performance Bridges gives that it succeeds beautifully even though the besotted, bedeviled country singer has been an overly familiar popular culture staple for forever," wrote Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan.

BAD MEANS GOOD

Bad Blake is the epitome of his name at first, peeing in a jug so he can keep driving to his next gig at a bowling alley, then getting so drunk he runs offstage to vomit.

But along comes journalist and single mother Jean (Maggie Gyllenhaal). A relationship blossoms, and Bad goes good.

Like any good country song, there are bumps in the road to Bad''s redemption. That means heartache and pain, love and loss, friendship and kinship -- and not always in that order.

© 2010