Catherine Hardwicke On Her Kinky, Twisted Thriller 'Plush' and Why She Considers 'Twilight' an Indie
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Catherine Hardwicke often speaks with the giddy, impassioned verve of a
teenager. She takes great breaths in her speech in order to emphasize
ideas, and to help you feel the way she feels about them. Given
Hardwicke's filmography, such a disposition seems only natural. It's
easy to see the themes and characters that attract the director. Since
her searing, achingly raw breakout, “Thirteen,” Hardwicke has gravitated
toward the filmic translation of adolescence, rebellion, rock, and
angst, preferably channeled through a young female protagonist.
Hardwicke is also, of course, the helmer of the first “Twilight” movie,
which she says she personally regards as an “indie film,” as well as
“The Nativity Story,” which gave us Mary (Keisha Castle-Hughes) as the
original pregnant teen.
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Arriving on DVD and VOD October 15, and co-starring “Twilight” alum Cam
Gigandet as Hayley's cuckolded hubbie, “Plush,” Hardwicke says, was a
work that allowed her to stretch, and she concedes that it may reflect
that she's a little twisted herself. Speaking further, she chats about
how Browning and Samuel's onscreen heat translated into true romance,
how kid leashes and coyote vomit made it into the final cut, and how
“Plush” is a sinful pleasure that's off the rails in all the right ways.
Regarding the females you've presented in your work, you've really run
the gamut, from Tracy in “Thirteen” and Mary in “The Nativity Story” to
Bella Swan in “Twilight” and Red in “Red Riding Hood.” How does Hayley
fit into that mix for you?
Let me just say first that I love that you threw Mary in there too.
Thank you! Well, Hayley, in my mind, is struggling to find out who she
is as an artist. She had this awesome collaborator in her brother, and
now she's vulnerable, and trying to recover from that and find herself
again. And she's also got herself in this crazy situation with two kids
and a husband, and she's probably too young for all of it, and it's
maybe not her choice. So it's like, how does a woman right now try to
have a creative life, or a career, and a family? How do you do it all,
and how do you do it all well? She wants to push the edge with her art,
and she really wants to try to do something different. How do you get
into that zone? Who gets to do it?
Yeah, she's living two lives. How old is she supposed to be in the film?
Well, she had the kids when she was about 19, and now they're about four
and a half. So she's, like, 24, which was exactly Emily's age when we
filmed.
I'm sure you get asked this question constantly, but can you just
briefly touch on what the majority of your post-“Twilight” experience
has been like? Personally, I've always felt that your film stands apart
from the others in a very distinct way, but since the saga became so
huge, and both sacred to its fans and an easy target for its critics,
how do you feel about it now?
For
me, I have to say that, in a way, I was lucky. Because on my
“Twilight,” it didn't have the level of expectations that any of the
other ones had. No one, even the night before the film opened, ever
expected to hit $400 million. [Laughs] Or $69 million on opening
weekend. That just kind of blew everybody away. So I wasn't under that
kind of pressure and scrutiny. I got a chance to make my “Twilight,”
more like an indie film, in a way. I could really just kind of feel the
characters. And at that time, I believe Stephenie [Meyer] was busy
writing two other books—the last of the “Twilight” books and “The
Host”—and promoting the third “Twilight” book. So she wasn't even able
to be there that much. And I think that later on, the pressure became
more intense from every angle for the other directors, and they were
probably less able to make [their films] as personal as mine was able to
be. And I loved the first book the best anyway—just her fresh,
impulsive, first idea.
There's this dizzy, crazy, madly-in-love feeling, and that feeling is what attracted me. I just wanted to see if I could translate what people were feeling when they read the book—all that dizzy, crazy, madly-in-love stuff. For me it turned into its own outrageous thing.
There's this dizzy, crazy, madly-in-love feeling, and that feeling is what attracted me. I just wanted to see if I could translate what people were feeling when they read the book—all that dizzy, crazy, madly-in-love stuff. For me it turned into its own outrageous thing.
And
you have your “Twilight” star Cam Gigandet back again for “Plush.”
Kudos to you for not just hiring him to take his shirt off. He gets
pigeonholed and typecast quite a bit, and that isn't the case here.
Yeah, and one thing that's cool about Cam is that since I worked with
him on “Twilight,” he's had a kid. Actually he's had two kids. So he
really has developed that father thing, too. He's a hunky father, and
obviously amazing, but he's also become really soulful, and really
connected with his children. So I thought he was kind of perfect for
this as the grounded figure who's trying to be as supportive as he can.
He holds on as long as he can until it stretches the boundaries of all
credibility.
(..)
There's a line in the film about artists and geniuses being a little
twisted. Is “Plush” to be the definitive film that tells us Catherine
Hardwicke is a little twisted?
[Laughs] Oh my god. Well, yeah, you never know. I think I just wanted to
really try to explore some of these things that you explore in your
brain, and try and figure out how to get in the zone, get in touch with
your own ideas, take risks, break barriers, and jump out of your comfort
zone. How do you stretch? How do you get creative? I just wanted to let
go and explore all of that.
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