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Wywiady z Christiną

 
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PostWysłany: Nie 10:43, 02 Mar 2008    Temat postu: Wywiady z Christiną

W wywiadzie opowiada o roli w "Penelope" i mówi o swoim nowym filmie "Speed Racers"

Cytat:
Life on the set of Penelope was a little bit of life imitating art, says star Christina Ricci. Liker her character, she kept behind closed doors and only stepped out disguised with a scarf.

Why all the secrecy? Filmmakers feared the public and paparazzi would catch a glimpse of Ricci’s prosthetic pig snout before they were ready to reveal it.

“I'd want to go to Starbucks, or something, and they would just panic,” Ricci explains. “I'd walk out of the trailer and you'd see the P.A.'s panic and say, ‘Does she have her scarf on her face?’”

In the film, it is Penelope’s parents who are fighting to keep her in hiding, tucked away in their mansion until they can find “one of her own kind” to fall for her and lift the family curse. Fed up, Penelope takes off on her own, with only a scarf to protect her identity.

Hollywood.com caught up with the child actress-turned-movie star to find out more about Penelope, her upcoming film Speed Racer, and more.

Hollywood.com: This film is rated PG; what message do you hope young people take away from it?
Christina Ricci: I really hope that the strongest message that's taken away is self-acceptance and self-love, and that you have to learn to love yourself and you have to accept who you are…A lot of our society is based on, "I'll be happy once I have the right man," or changing yourself a little bit, or a lot, depending on who you're with. The things women do to be with different men is just ridiculous. So, I think it's important that we have young girls that are growing up learn to be really strong and independent and have the right sort of priorities.

HW: What was your biggest insecurity growing up?
CR: My sister and I have two insecurities, which are pretty funny. You know how everyone has something?...Whenever we go out, me and my sister always ask each other, "Do I look butch?," and "Do I look crazy?" [Laughs] Those are the two things we're both terrified of. We're terrified that we look crazy, and then on other days that we look like boys.

HW: What about putting on the pig nose, any insecurity there?
CR: The first one they put on me was a little bit too hideous and scary and kind of nasty looking…and then, all the girls in the room were like, "Uh uh. We want that one that looks like Miss Piggy and is cute." And so, somewhere in the middle, we found it. It just looked like me with a fake nose on. It didn't really disturb me, in any way.

HW: Did it take a long time to put it on every day? Was it uncomfortable?
CR: It took about an hour and a half. It's not fun to have something glued to your face. It just isn't…I had a rule that I wasn't allowed to really acknowledge how irritating it was or touch it or scratch it or complain until we only had like three hours left of the day because I knew that if I started in the beginning, I would just be irritated all day long and want to rip it off my face. So, I felt that, if I started late in the day then I could tolerate three hours of being really irritated.

HW: Penelope spends a lot of time in her room, it is kind of her own little world, were you like that growing up?
CR: Yeah. Penelope was encouraged to be very expressive and, of course, she couldn't leave her house and I could actually leave my room, so I didn't really feel as much of a need to do that. But, yeah, I was very much one of those kids that would go in my room and lie down on the carpet and daydream a lot, and talk to myself a lot. Penelope is definitely like that.

HW: Did you have your favorite things on the walls?
CR: Yes, I did. I shared a room with my sister for a really long time, and then I finally got my own room and it was just ridiculous looking. I got my own room when my oldest brother went to college. It was this little room, and I wanted to decorate it any way I wanted to because, living with my sister in the same room, she got to do whatever she wanted to. I don't know why my mother even allowed this to happen, but I picked green and pink, and this horrible Laura Ashley duvet cover, and rose pink carpeting. I mean, honestly. But, the room I lived in before, with my sister, was purple, and now, every house I live in, I have a purple room, so I guess those were the more formative years for me.

HW: It is so different to see you as a blonde; did you dye your hair for a new role?
CR: For Speed Racer it was cut into a very extreme bob, and it was black. And then, I came home and wanted to grow it out…I thought putting it back to brown might be better, and I softened it up a little bit because it was a little extreme.

HW: Were you nervous at all, to cut your hair so short?
CR: Yes. I had spent the entire year growing it out, of course, which is what always happens. And, I kept calling my manager's office and saying to them, "Will you call and tell them that, if they're going to make a wig for me--wink, wink--they should probably get my measurements, or something, and start making it now." And, everyone was like, "No, no, no, it's going to be fine. They're not going to do anything weird to your hair." And then, of course, I got some drawings of what the costumes are going to look like…and, of course, it was a short hair-cut bob thing. So, I just decided to embrace it and go with it…I can always ask for a wig on the second one. [Laughs] You feel like, if you do it once, then you're justified in saying, "OK, I did it, and I don't want to anymore."

HW: Was the role of Trixie very physical for you, or will they just CGI everything?
CR: No. Speed Racer was the most fun ever. That's another example of a great role model character for girls because she's smart, she's funny and she does all the things the boys do. She kung fu fights…she races and she flies a helicopter. But, she has a specific outfit that she wears when she flies the helicopter, and her lipstick always matches something she's wearing. She gets to be everything. She's celebrated as a girl and a woman, but she's also not treated any differently than the male characters are. So, it was so much fun, in that respect. I like being dressed up and I like doing stunts.

HW: You still had fun, even with all the green screen?
CR: But, that made it hilarious. We'd walk on set and there would be half a helicopter, and then the rest of the thing was just green. And, it's an ensemble piece, so there's a lot of other actors to look at and just say, "What the hell is that? What scene are we shooting?" So, it just made it funny. We would just walk around and be like, "All right, so the mountain's over there, and what is that? Oh, that's the edge of the cliff. OK, well, I shouldn't be over there." It was just funny. It made it all really hilarious. And then, towards the end of the day, the green would start to make you feel like you were tripping, so that was also, at times, enjoyable. [Laughs]

HW: Have you seen any of the final footage?
CR: The [Wachowski] brothers showed us 15 minutes, and it's just amazing. It looks like nothing you've ever seen before. All the driving stuff is really exciting and thrilling. And then, it has this emotional element that's actually really quite moving. A lot of guys were crying at the end of the 15 minutes because there's this real guy sad thing. [Laughs] But, also, every character in it is a very specific, funny character. Mom (Susan Sarandon) is always going to have her apron on, and Sparky (Kick Gurry) is going to always be Chaplin-esque and funny, and Mr. Royalton (Roger Allam) will always be evil. It's just fun. Everything about the movie makes it feel like an event movie, so that's exciting.


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PostWysłany: Pon 9:57, 03 Mar 2008    Temat postu:

jestem tak dziś leniwa, że nie chce mi się czytać Laughing

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PostWysłany: Wto 10:16, 04 Mar 2008    Temat postu:

Mnie najbardziej interesuje to co mowi o filmie Wachowskich.

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PostWysłany: Wto 9:44, 13 Maj 2008    Temat postu:

Cytat:
From writer/directors Larry and Andy Wachowski, the creators of the groundbreaking The Matrix trilogy, and producer Joel Silver, comes the live-action, high-octane family adventure Speed Racer, starring Emile Hirsch and Christina Ricci.

Trixie flies a helicopter in the movie. Is that her racecar?

They wrote this character and she made sense to me. This is a car culture, and you’ve got to think that Speed raced a lot of rallies in his young life and she’s part of the team. That’s her contribution.

Did you know before you got the role of Trixie that you’d be doing martial arts in the movie?

A lot of the script was action sequences – just pages and pages describing the races and action sequences. I didn’t read those pages because it was a little dense and I had to audition in twenty-four hours. So, when I got to the set and the stunt coordinator came to see me, he said, ‘So, you’re going to be doing some kung fu.’ I was like, ‘What? Really? I fight in this?’ And he assured me that I fight in this. I had a couple of training sessions. It was really fun and the stunt guys were awesome and really fun to deal with and work with. I had a really good time. I love that kind of thing, so it was great. I tend to be very competitive and athletic, so it was awesome.

With so much of the film being shot in front of a green screen, did the Wachowskis give you detailed information about what each scene would look like?

No. They explained as much as they could and you were certainly able to go and find out as much as you wanted to, or you could know as little as you wanted to. I mean, there’s no way of really knowing exactly what it’s going to be like because it’s very much in their hands. With Larry and Andy, it’s their personality, it’s their ideas and vision that stamped all over the movie. But the thing is, you get such a great feeling out of the fact that they know exactly what they’re going to be doing. They have this world worked out completely.

You can ask any question about minutia in the world and they would know the answer. So, when people are like that, it tends to inspire a lot of confidence and a lot of trust. Also, there’s this idea that if I argue with them, I have no ground to stand on because I have no idea what’s in their head. So, it’s not like you can say, ‘Look, I don’t think this would go with what’s happening in the background,’ because you don’t know what is happening in the background. So, you really are in a place where you just do what they tell you. If you don’t, it probably will not fit with the rest of the film.

Were you nervous meeting the Wachowskis for the first time?

I was very nervous. I didn’t talk much at my audition. Then they said they were worried about hiring me because I didn’t talk much. I was like, ‘I was nervous, people. Come on.’ It was a combination of the fact that I really would have liked to do the job plus being a huge fan of theirs. I loved The Matrix.


What’s the most daredevil-ish thing you’ve done in real life?

I don’t do a lot of daredevil-y things. The things I’ve done for movies have been scarier. They attached me to a rope and I was swung across the gorge when I was 13, and that was totally scary. I would never do anything like that in real life, but it was one of those things where they just said, ‘Okay, are you ready? We’re going to go.’ I figured I’d just have to do it.

Did you have a favorite outfit of Trixie’s?

I really enjoyed my helicopter outfit. What else did I really like? I liked my Lover’s Lane outfit a lot, too. That’s pretty fun.

You did have a lot of wardrobe changes.

Oh, yes, I did. I was like the main girl in it, so it was like I was their doll. They just dressed me up and sent me out there to do things. It’s fun. Because when somebody’s using you as their dress-up doll, there’s something about that that’s incredibly endearing and fun.

The first time you see Trixie is that close-up and you immediately get an idea of the attitude the character has. How much say do you have in that?

A lot. I mean, they know what they want and they’re very communicative about that. You take their ideas and your own ideas and work it out. So, it’s a blend of different people’s opinions, but mainly coming from the original vision that the Wachowskis have.

How does being in a spectacle movie like this affect your acting?

The spectacle is not there when we’re acting. We’re just acting, and then they put the spectacle in later. It doesn’t really change your acting.

Did they give you helicopter lessons?

No, but they did have to teach me what it would look like if I knew how to drive a helicopter, which was really fun, actually, because you get to lean into turns and use your whole body weight. It’s pretty awesome.

Having been a child actress, what’s it like for you now to look up at the screen and see a child playing you as a kid?

That’s always a weird thing because people know what I looked like when I was nine. Sometimes filmmakers will choose people who really don’t look like I did and it is sort of odd because there is footage of me out there at that age. But in this case, they chose a girl who she looks pretty much like me. You can imagine it. She looks like the character; she looks like Trixie.

From LastBroadcast.co.uk


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PostWysłany: Sob 8:47, 17 Maj 2008    Temat postu:

Christina Ricci began generating buzz around her impressive acting talents with her film debut in Mermaids and the former child actress has since established quite a cult following with her distinguishing performances in films like The Adams Family, Casper, The Ice Storm and Sleepy Hollow. The once troubled teen, who has starred in several indie films and rather provocative and revealing roles, can next be seen in the Wachowski Brothers' big screen adaptation of the popular 1960s cartoon Speed Racer.

The 28-year-old plays Trixie, the feisty girlfriend of Speed and ComingSoon.net talked to Ricci about her new family film and what is was like working with the media shy Wachowski brothers.

ComingSoon.net: Is the lighter hair for a role or just for you?
Christina Ricci: No, it's for me.

CS: What attracted you to this?
Ricci: I loved the idea of working with the Wachowskis. I've wanted to work with them for a while and then "Speed Racer" was actually always something that people had mentioned to me like, "oh, you know they're gonna make 'Speed Racer.' You'd be a good Trixie," blah, blah, blah.

CS: Were you familiar with her?
Ricci: I was familiar with her from all the hipster paraphernalia and the Geico commercial but I'd never seen the cartoons. So then, they sent me the script and I had to go in and audition very quickly afterwards.

CS: What was the biggest challenge about playing her?
Ricci: There really weren't any challenges. I didn't enjoy my haircut but that's really the only challenge.

CS: But it looked good on you.
Ricci: I know, but when you have long hair and then, all of a sudden, you get a really drastic haircut, you know, us ladies, we cry. But, other than that, she was a great character to play. She was amazing and fun and they dressed me up like a doll every day but then I got to do all this actiony stuff and had a really good time.

CS: You have said you pick characters who are afraid and a little ashamed of who they are and they go to extremes because of it and this character seems completely opposite…
Ricci: I think I like complex characters and, for drama, the people who do the most dramatic things are the people who have personal problems. Recently I have grown up and become a little less afraid of sincerity and I have a real vested interest in women's issues and the next generation of girls and also, just looking around a little bit more and seeing all of the negative images that are out there for young girls. It's like, what are they supposed to grow up into if the only images they have out there are like the brats? It's crazy. So, I really like the fact that she, to me, is the ultimate feminist character. She's girlie as she wants to be but then she does everything the boys do and there's no commentary on "ooo, it's a girl doing that. Oooo, it's a girl flying a helicopter." And the brothers are very much responsible for that kind of thing because they have a very strong sense of equality and an interest in leaving the world a better place than they found it. So, I was really excited about that.

CS: How was it working with them?
Ricci: They're great. They're so much fun and they're just wonderful people and they're so smart and just like, at a party, they're the most interesting people to talk to. But, working with them was great because they want to have a good time and they want everyone to be happy so, on a set, it's just everyone hanging out, having fun, laughing at what's happening, just having a good time.

CS: What's it like working with green screen? John Goodman compared it to working in really, really low budget theater where there's no props, no sets.
Ricci: I liked it because it immediately created a bond amongst all the actors and a lot of our stuff, especially at the beginning of shooting was all family stuff so it was all ensemble, all of us together. Immediately, you walk into this big green room and you look at everyone else dressed in various hilarious costumes and you just say, "Yeah, okay. What are we doing today?" Then, they are like, "it's snowing," "oh, Susan, did you know it's snowing right now?" We're laughing and kind of like it's ridiculous but we're committed to it. We don't know what's around us but we're gonna do what they tell us to. It creates a bond that is really wonderful.

CS: Did you watch the cartoons for research before filming?
Ricci: No. I saw it but it didn't tell me much.

CS: I heard the script was quite long. Were there any scenes of yours that didn't make the final cut?
Ricci: No. The script was quite long but only because all of the action in the races was described. Like "he turns left and jumps over and double, triple jumps.. nah, na, na, na na." Half of that stuff I didn't read [laughter]. I'm like [running her finger across imaginary script pages] "race, race, race, race, he wins." Okay, "race, race, race, race, something evil happens. Oh, a little sabotage, okay, good." But, other than that, I read all the stuff that wasn't descriptive racing stuff.

CS: Was there any time to have fun off set in Berlin?
Ricci: Yeah. We had a great time. The brothers threw a lot of parties and people on the crew threw parties, a lot of the actors went out and socialized among themselves and we were all staying at the same hotel so we spent evenings together. It was just really fun. It was summer in Berlin which didn't necessarily make it warm but there were some warm days that we went out and had a good time outside.

CS: Everything was inside on the sound stages?
Ricci: Everything, yeah.

CS: No location work?
Ricci: No.

CS: Did you get to do some of the more physical stuff like ride the gimbal race machine? How was that?
Ricci: It was fun. So much fun. I love doing that stuff and I love getting little battle injuries and stuff like that, battle scars.

CS: Did you get hurt?
Ricci: I did get a little hurt. You get banged around in the gimbal thing so much and you end up with bruises. At one point, I had to get out and throw up and get back in because it's a lot of shaking and craziness but it was just really fun. I had a good time.

CS: Was there anything the cars did that you thought "I wish my car could do that?"
Ricci: I'd like to be able to jump over people; jump over other cars. That would be pretty good. Also, that whole changing the tire thing by leaping up in the air, that would be great. I just learned how to change a tire myself but it would be so much easier if I could just leap up and press "D."

CS: I read that you were nervous at your interview for this. You had on black Converse sneakers and so did the brothers. Tell that story.
Ricci: Oh, I thought I gave a horrible audition but, at one point, I caught Andy's eye and Andy looked at my sneakers and I looked at his and looked back up at him and sort of smiled. I was like "maybe the Chuck Taylors will work." [laughter] But, I thought I gave a horrible audition.

CS: Are you a good driver?
Ricci: I like to believe I am.

CS: What do you drive?
Ricci: I don't want to talk about that. I'm stuck on a lease. Now, I saw the Al Gore movie after I signed my lease.

CS: What would you have if you could?
Ricci: I want a Mini-Cooper because it's fuel efficient, emissions efficient and all that stuff. It's small and better for the environment. I think that will be my next car.

CS: Do you have a Navigator?
Ricci: No. Not that bad.

CS: What did you think of the visual style of the movie? Did it look like you imagined it as you went along?
Ricci: I don't think any of us could have known what was in their heads completely. What they have managed to create is so much bigger, much more beautiful and engaging than anything I thought was going to be up there. It's really incredible. It's like nothing I've ever seen before so it's kind of hard for me to explain it. I can't wait to see a lot of other people's reactions to it.

CS: Doesn't it take a lot of trust to say "okay, I'll stand here in front of this [green] screen?"
Ricci: Oh yeah. That's the thing about these two directors is that they inspire such confidence and such trust because you can tell they have this complete vision in their heads and you would be doing yourself a huge disservice to not trust them and just do what they tell you to because how are you possibly going to know if what you do matches what's in their heads unless they tell you?

CS: Did you get to keep any of the costumes?
Ricci: No. I didn't.

CS: Did you have input going in?
Ricci: Yeah, you can always go in and you're like "I don't like the way it looks on me" blah, blah, but I was really into all of the designs and very excited about it and I loved it. Kym Barrett's our Wardrobe Designer and I loved all her stuff so much that it became really fun.

CS: Can you talk about working with Emile? You seemed to have good chemistry.
Ricci: Yeah, he's really a sweet, sweet kid. We had such a good time together from the very first. When I read, he already had the part and he was reading with me and he was just so helpful and really nice. I've read with a lot of people who are not necessarily so giving. They've already got the part so what do they care? And those people are not nice. Emile was just really helpful and really wonderful. Then, working on the set with him was really fun. The whole cast had such a good time. Everyone was laughing and making fun of each other. It was fun.

CS: What's next for you?
Ricci: I'm doing a smaller drama at the end of May. I can't actually talk about it yet because the deal's not closed.

CS: Do you like doing a big movie then a smaller one; mixing it up?
Ricci: It's not intentional at all. It's just what happened.

CS: Are you a fan of Anime or Manga comics?
Ricci: I think they're pretty.

CS: Since you are interested in promoting girl power and feminist issues, is there a particular character from history that you would like to one day portray?
Ricci: Good question. I don't know. I've always been obsessed with Eleanor of Aquitaine but I don't know if that's because of any feminist feelings I have. I'd like to go back and revisit that story.

CS: Do you enjoy the audition process or is it just for bigger movies like this that you would still have to audition?
Ricci: I actually don't mind auditioning but you do have to audition for movies like this. There's a lot of money at stake and a lot of people have input.

CS: Young Trixie punches out a girl for dissing her man. Would you do that if somebody dissed your man?
Ricci: It depends on what they said. I'd probably strike back verbally. Be snide and quiet.


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PostWysłany: Nie 8:22, 18 Maj 2008    Temat postu:

trochę szkoda, że one wszystkie nie są po polsku.

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