Troian Bellisario, star of Richard Linklater‘s new comedic drama “Where’d You Go Bernadette” joins our own Ms. Moviefone at the the art studio to celebrate one of the central themes of the film — artists must channel their creativity… or else. Watch below to see Troian discuss auditions gone wrong, what it’s like to hit a mark on a kayak, and mostly how she interprets the still life that includes a fox named Stixy Renard.
“Where’d You Go Bernadette” is in theaters everywhere starting tonight.
Looking for relief from the summer’s never-ending onslaught of superheroes, strongmen and animated birds? Well, director Richard Linklater has you covered. The filmmaker behind “Dazed and Confused,” “Boyhood” and “Before Midnight,” has something frothy and wonderful up his sleeve in “Where’d You Go, Bernadette,” a slick adaptation of the best-seller by Maria Semple about a woman (Cate Blanchett), who becomes stifled with her suburban life and strikes out on her own, in the biggest way possible.
It’s another charming left turn from the American auteur and the kind of thoughtful, performance-driven piece that you expect around Oscar season, not in the dog days of summer.
So you can imagine how thrilled we were to talk about the process of adapting the book (which took a very long time), what it was like working with such a legendary actress, whether or not he’d want to do a horror movie, and what he thought of his bud Quentin Tarantino’s very Linklater-esque “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood.”
Moviefone: What drew you to this project initially?
Richard Linklater: It was just Maria Semple’s book, you know? It was an exhilarating read. Bernadette’s such a fascinating character — so complex. I just felt the book was about a lot of things, it gets its hooks in you.
You were announced for the project so long ago.
It’s been quite a journey, that’s for sure. It’s been a number of years. Cate Blanchett and I were just talking yesterday. It was like, “When we first had breakfast about this, it was coming up on five years.” That tells you something about, from the time we had both read the book and what the journey would entail. And the film itself, the postproduction journey took longer to edit than usual. There was a lot of story there. I think that adaptation process continued, but I was super happy with it. It’s just complex. It took longer than, than you expect. Everything about it was a little trickier than usual for me.
What was so tricky about it and how did you get it into shape in post-production?
It was just an extra layer of production. We had to literally go to the end of the earth and shoot this. We couldn’t actually shoot in Antarctica at times, because if it’s winter down there, they don’t even let you. So we shot early, we shot when it was summer down there, and then we had those plates we used and when we shot it in the North Pole with them around the icebergs. It was a bit of a visual trick, like most movies putting it all together, but that’s just technical. The psychological trick was probably the tougher one. Just like, what was this movie really about? Is Bernadette crazy? Is she normal and the world’s crazy? That was the fun part.
Annapurna
How essential was Cate Blanchett to this whole process?
I don’t think you have a movie without Cate. I can’t imagine anyone else really.
If you were talking about this five years ago, what was her insight and input as you went along?
Well Cate to me is the dream, just the ideal collaborator. She works so hard, there’s a reason she’s Cate Blanchett. Genius is k hard to quantify and hard to talk about, but it’s easy to know when you see it. So she’s got that. What I liked about her that I can talk about is her work ethic. She really wanted to rehearse, really always digging in. There was always say and think about. We had a great time. I really loved working with her. I can’t put it any other way.
Is a move with this much plot challenging in a way?
Well, movies or stories are different to varying degrees. Even in my most hangout movies, there’s usually a clock ticking of some kind or there’s something driving that. And in this case we’re just revealing more and more about Bernadette and heating up these forces against her. At the one hand, she’s being characterized in a way and that’s reaching a boil that’s going affect her life. On the other hand, she’s sort of rediscovering her calling and that’s coming too, so there’s this big train wreck in the intervention scene, which to me is like a mini horror film. And she’s very right to jump out that window. Then she proceeds on her mystical journey to the Antarctica. She’s been drawn there, so that’s definitely the right track for her.
Is there a parallel between architecture and filmmaking?
Absolutely. I can’t think of another art form that’s closer to filmmaking than architecture. The director and the architecs are similar. You’re designing and all that but there’s still a lot of people to collaborate with before you have a finished building or a finished movie. There’s a lot can go wrong between that thing on paper and the final thing. It’s pretty heady. And also I think on another level, more of an anxiety, vulnerability level, I know a lot of architects who have designed some really cool buildings that never got built. They even made a little cool model of them but never got built. Sort of, I’ve written a lot scripts that haven’t been made. I mean, no songwriter wrote a song that didn’t get written. They wrote it, they played it, it might not become a hit or get big distribution, but they got to do it. The writers got to write, the painter got to paint. I’m not talking where it went from there, but the architect doesn’t get to build the building, sometimes. It stays on a drawing board or in a little model. For a filmmaker, it stays there. And that in itself is incomplete, that’s not the end. The plans are the beginning, not the anything unto themselves. I always felt that way about scripts. It’s just merely the jumping off point.
“Where’d You Go Bernadette” feels like new territory for you, tonally and genre-wise. Is there a genre that you haven’t done that you would like to do? You talked about the, the intervention sequence being sort of a horror movie. Would you like to do a full-on horror movie?
Yeah. But whatever that means. I’d like to do my horror movie, but I just don’t usually think in that those terms. So I don’t know if I’ll ever have a horror movie that interests me enough, that I can wrap my head around. Jarmusch just did his zombie movie, which is pretty interesting. He attacks each genre in some wonderful way. So I admire that. I don’t know. I think I’m less of a genre guy. What genre is “Bernadette” even?
It’s a big-time literary adaptation, which they don’t do that often.
Before e leave I was wondering if you had seen the new Quentin Tarantino movie, because it struck me as the most Linklater-y non-Linklater movie I think I’ve seen.
Oh yeah. can’t tell you how much I love that movie and it’s true. Quentin has pulled off the miraculous. He has made the biggest budget hangout movie of all time. It’s a total triumph.
That’s great that you loved it.
That’s a good observation about Quentin’s movie. I felt the same way but you’re the first person that mentioned that. I’ve known him for years and said, “I’m thinking of doing a hangout movie.” So I think he did his hangout movie.
Did he give you the script or anything?
No, I knew what he was working on. I even visited while he was shooting, but I didn’t know. I kind of knew what he was up to in the abstract. I want to be surprised in the theater, which I certainly was.
“Where’d You Go Bernadette” is in theaters on Friday.
The Oscar-winning actress is in talks to star opposite Bradley Cooper in “Nightmare Alley,” an adaptation of William Lindsay Gresham’s novel.
The book was previously adapted into a movie in 1947, which starred Tyrone Power as an ambitious young con-man who teams up with a female psychiatrist who is even more corrupt than he is. At first, they enjoy success fleecing people with their mentalist act, but then she turns the tables on him, out-manipulating the manipulator.
“Nightmare Alley” is del Toro’s first directing gig since 2017’s “Shape of Water,” which won four Academy Awards including Best Picture.
Blanchett can next be seen in Richard Linklater’s “Where’d You Go Bernadette?” this fall.
After directing a string of projects, Elizabeth Banks is getting back in front of the camera, this time for a star-studded limited series.
Variety reports that Banks is set to co-star in the upcoming FX drama “Mrs. America,” which tells the true story behind the attempt — and ultimate failure — to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) in 1972. The actress joins a stacked ensemble led by Oscar winner Cate Blanchett, who’s playing Phyllis Schlafly, a conservative woman who launched a crusade against the amendment.
Banks is set to play a woman named Jill Ruckelshaus, who Variety describes as “a pro-choice, socially progressive Republican who was appointed by President Ford to advance women’s rights and fought to keep the Republican Party from being taken over by Phyllis Schlafly and the Religious Right.” The rest of the starry cast includes Uzo Aduba, Rose Byrne, Kayli Carter, Ari Graynor, Melanie Lynskey, James Marsden, Margo Martindale, Sarah Paulson, John Slattery, Jeanne Tripplehorn, and Tracey Ullman.
Based on that group of talent alone, we’re extremely excited for this series. Add in the bonus of it airing on FX (which has a knack for limited series, including “American Horror Story” and “American Crime Story”), and its behind the scenes creatives (who include “Captain Marvel” directors Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, who are helming the first two episodes and producing the series), and “Mrs. America” sounds like a winner.
The series is expected to air on FX sometime in 2020.
It’s rare that Cate Blanchett stars in a TV series, but she now has a new one on the way.
The two-time Academy Award winner is set to star in the upcoming six-part series “Stateless,” Variety reports. The show follows four strangers who find themselves stuck in a remote Australian immigration detention center. Blanchett co-created the series with Tony Ayres and Elise McCredie.
Prior to “Stateless,” Blanchett appeared in the Australian series “Rake,” “Bordertown,” and “Heartland.” More of her roles have been in films, though. Her recent films include “Ocean’s 8” and “Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle,” and she appears in the upcoming “Where’d You Go Bernadette.”
“Stateless” will also star Yvonne Strahovski and Dominic West. The series intends to offer unique perspectives on issues of protection and border control. The four main characters are an Afghan refugee, a flight attendant fleeing a suburban cult, a young Australian father, and a bureaucrat who is at the center of a scandal. Other cast members include Jai Courtney, Asher Keddie, and Rachel House.
“Stateless” has an all-female writing and directing team, with writers McCredie and Belinda Chayko and directors Emma Freeman and Jocelyn Moorhouse. McCredie serves as showrunner and executive producer as well. Fellow executive producers include Blanchett, husband Andrew Upton, Ayres, Liz Watts, Sally Riley, and Andrew Gregory. Sheila Jayadev and Paul Ranford are producing.
“Stateless” is set to begin production in South Australia in June and will be distributed worldwide by NBCUniversal. It is being produced by Dirty Films, the Australian Broadcasting Corp., Screen Australia, and Matchbox Pictures. Meanwhile, funding comes from Screen Australia and the ABC as well as the South Australian Film Corp.
The Oscar-winning actress stars in the first trailer for “Where’d You Go, Bernadette,” Richard Linklater’s adaptation of the bestselling novel by Maria Semple.
Blanchett is the titular Seattle woman, who seemingly does have it all — loving husband, brilliant daughter, a successful career as an architect. And then one day, she vanishes, causing her family and friends to band together to figure out where she’s gone.
The trailer gives off a quirky, kooky vibe — perhaps a bit more heartwarmingly madcap than Linklater’s usual fare. He also added his writing touch to the screenplay, so it’ll be interesting to see how his dialogue meshes with whatever was brought over from Semple’s novel.
The movie also stars Billy Crudup, Kristen Wiig, Judy Greer, and Laurence Fishburne. “Where’d You Go, Bernadette” opens in theaters March 22.
Cate Blanchett is the latest Oscar winner to head to television in a bid for an Emmy. The actress will star in and produce “Mrs. America,” a limited series for FX.
“Mrs. America” is based on the true story of the movement to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. Blanchett will play Phyllis Schlafly, a conservative woman who led the unexpected backlash. The series is told from the perspective of women of that era —Schlafly and second wave feminists Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan Shirley Chisholm, Bella Abzug and Jill Ruckelshaus.
It will will explore how one of the toughest battlegrounds in the culture wars of the ’70s helped give rise to the Moral Majority and forever shifted the political landscape.
“Mrs. America” will mark Blanchett’s first role on an American TV show. “I am extremely excited about delving into the material as there couldn’t be a more appropriate time to peel back the layers of this recent period of history, which couldn’t be more relevant today,” she said in a statement.
Blanchett most recently appeared in this year’s “Ocean’s 8” and “The House With a Clock in Its Walls.”
“You’re no good, you’re no good, you’re no good. Baby, you’re no good.”
But the “Ocean’s 8″ team is treating us very well so far, and we can’t wait to see more of them this June.
Warner Bros. just released the official main trailer for “Ocean’s 8,” fully introducing the dream cast and sharing more about the plan to rob the annual Met ball.
We see Sandra Bullock as Debbie Ocean — the felon sister of Danny Ocean — who concocted this little plan while she was busy hanging out in prison … for over five years.
The rest of the team includes Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway, Mindy Kaling, Sarah Paulson, Awkwafina, Rihanna, and Helena Bonham Carter. Non-8 costars include James Corden — who has a big presence at the start of the trailer — and Richard Armitage.As a build-up to the trailer premiere, the official Twitter account teased out some character promos:
When two superstar Chrises meet, it’s not surprising to hear the ground quakes and a man-crush is born. Chris Hemsworth (Thor) was in the Marvel Cinematic Universe before Chris Pratt, but he confessed to ELLE that he was shaken meeting Star-Lord.
ELLE: When was the last time you were intimidated by another man?
The first time I really met Chris Pratt—and went on set with him and the Guardians—I was weirdly shaken. [Laughs] I don’t know why. He’s just so charismatic. And good at what he does.
Yep, sounds like a crush. Now that Pratt is single and might have more free time, maybe he and Hemsworth should put some work into this bromance and see it fully blossom.
Pratt and his fellow “Guardians of the Galaxy” will be in “Avengers: Infinity War” with Thor and company. Thor will next be seen with the Hulk in “Thor: Ragnarok.” That co-stars another person Hemsworth was intimidated by, Cate Blanchett (Hela):
ELLE: Tell us something we wouldn’t expect about Cate Blanchett.
She calls you on your sh*t straightaway. Which is intimidating. You walk in and you’re doing all the usual polite chats, and she’s like, “Chris, what are you doing? Really, that’s the story you’re gonna tell?” And you’re like, “Sh*t, I’m not going to get away with anything with this lady. I have to drop the facade.”
The leading-man facade?
Kind of. You know, she’s Cate Blanchett, for God’s sake! There’s quite a feeling of wanting to impress her. She’s like, “I’m a human being. Act normal.” Before you know it, you’re drinking and telling stories and cracking jokes. She has a wild sense of humor.
Cate Blanchett is such a legend. Hemsworth gets intimidated pretty often, though. He’s also talked about how Wonder Woman could beat Thor in a fight, and Charlize Theron should be the next Bond after Daniel Craig because “she scares the hell out of me, and I think she could beat the sh*t out of me and most villains out there.”
“Thor: Ragnarok” opens November 3. “Avengers: Infinity War” opens May 4, 2018.