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  • - I'm Janina Gavankar

  • and you are watching Instudio

  • with The Hollywood Reporter.

  • (dramatic music)

  • - Okay. So, let's start with "The Way Back."

  • which is really seen in theaters today.

  • - Wow. Okay. (laughs)

  • That's wild. Yeah.

  • - Has it been a while?

  • Have you been waiting for the theatrical release?

  • - Yeah.

  • We started shooting this in October of 2018

  • and we did re-shoots in the middle of this last year.

  • And,

  • wants to see how the real thing just,

  • (laughs)

  • - Well, this is a very impressive movie.

  • It's about loss,

  • it's about grief,

  • it's about redemption,

  • it's about basketball,

  • (laughs) - Yeah. - It's about so many things.

  • How do you feel about the overall message of the movie?

  • - I think it's a really important movie

  • if we did everything that we were supposed to.

  • And, I gotta say

  • this whole experience is felt

  • more like doing an indie movie

  • than a studio movie ever could.

  • I mean, I've done a ton of indie projects

  • and I did not think it was gonna feel the way that it did.

  • It was a really intimate experience

  • and that just chalked that up to Gavin.

  • - Most of your scenes with Ben Affleck,

  • you play exes.

  • What I noticed,

  • first and foremost,

  • was his character, Jack

  • was trying to bring your character, Angela

  • into his grief.

  • He was trying to bring her down

  • to his level.

  • And if he saw that you were coming out of your grief,

  • he was gonna bring you back down.

  • And that took, - it's so interesting

  • that you feel that way.

  • - Yeah, that was my impression of that.

  • I felt it so I was

  • watching the man that I still love

  • perform okayness

  • and try to prove that everything was fine

  • and that he was doing great.

  • And if anybody knows that that's a lie,

  • it's the woman that knows him best.

  • - Yeah.

  • - I mean, he's also,

  • I think when you are at your worst you really,

  • most people have a hard time accepting any help

  • for their own mental health

  • and part of that is like a feeling of unworthiness and,

  • I think all those things are also happening

  • so that's like the level underneath

  • really even what she is seeing.

  • So I love that that is what you felt.

  • And all of these things are true simultaneously.

  • - There's a duality to

  • when somebody is struggling with addiction

  • especially alcoholism.

  • The family dynamic can be

  • that they are pushing you away,

  • they are you that everything is great

  • and at the same time

  • they are trying to manipulate or reach out.

  • Like there's just so many things happening.

  • So, you are playing these scenes with Ben

  • and I noticed you have to kind of physically change,

  • like diminish yourself in certain places.

  • There was just like all of the emotions

  • that you had to show were extremely settled.

  • But I saw it in your body language.

  • Was that something that you were thinking about at the time

  • or is that something that - Yes or no.

  • I mean that's just sort of training and instinct

  • at some point.

  • You know, if you really

  • just commit yourself to understanding the situation

  • and every moment that's come before it

  • this is like theater one on one stuff.

  • You know, if you just go in with an action

  • and a motivation

  • and just are hyper aware of

  • everything that's come before,

  • all of those things will happen naturally

  • if you are in a safe space

  • with other actors and artists

  • who are willing to do the same thing.

  • - Great. And tell me about the space

  • that you share with Ben Affleck.

  • - Yeah. Sure. - Because you are,

  • I read an article in The Hollywood Reporter.

  • - No, it's fine (laughs)

  • What is that publication?

  • Are they in authority in the space?

  • - I think so.

  • I think you might know them.

  • But Peter, wonderful,

  • - Peter.

  • - Was talking to you about

  • you and Ben being able to have discussions

  • about not only what was happening

  • in the movie you were currently at

  • but the movie that you were writing and directing,

  • "Missing Time" - Yeah.

  • I was prepping my short film simultaneously

  • which deals with mental health

  • and suppressing anxiety

  • and I told Ben the whole entire thing.

  • I pitched him the whole story.

  • I pitched him the tongue sequence

  • which is a sort of like

  • a pretty intense moment.

  • We love magical realism,

  • like my creative partner and I.

  • So, but that means that we really have to pitch ideas

  • to as many people as we can

  • to make sure that what we're actually trying to do

  • is not lost behind the gag.

  • So,

  • yeah, I pitched the tongue sequence to Ben

  • and he just twisted up his little face like,

  • - You got the appropriate reaction?

  • - I was like, "Yeah. I got him."

  • (laughs)

  • Kinda like, "We really got something now. Yeah."

  • - It's wonderful.

  • I mean, what is it like,

  • as a first-time director.

  • - Yeah. I've directed a bunch of

  • sort of like other little pieces

  • and like music videos and these kinds of things

  • but this is my first narrative short film, yeah.

  • - So, let's talk a little bit about Stucco.

  • - Sure.

  • - Because it is going to be premiering

  • at the South by Southwest.

  • - Yeah. It's not a premiere

  • but we're in competition at South by.

  • - Okay. Great.

  • Fantastic.

  • - But we did just premiere online

  • at thehollywoodreporter.com. (laughing)

  • - That's right.

  • You can see it on The Hollywood Reporter.

  • - You can. - You can see the entire

  • short film.

  • - Yeah, which is really really cool to us.

  • It means a lot to us to have

  • the support of a trade.

  • You know, I've been doing this a long time

  • and I've been doing a lot of other things

  • besides acting for a long time.

  • But most people don't know that

  • and I don't feel like

  • just because a tree falls in the forest

  • and nobody's around that it doesn't make a sound.

  • Like I feel all the sounds of the trees

  • that I've made in the pa-

  • I don't know.

  • This is now unto the falling part.

  • But the point is that

  • this is the first very public offering

  • especially from Reso and I.

  • And to have the support

  • that you guys have given us.

  • And primarily, it actually means a lot to us.

  • So, it's true The Hollywood Reporter does write a lot

  • about female filmmakers

  • especially in the festival space.

  • I heard recently about a report

  • that they've been keeping track of female filmmakers,

  • producers, cinematographers

  • and finding a huge leap in a festival representation.

  • But still major feature films

  • incrementally women are taking

  • those jobs, positions. - And sometimes,

  • moving backwards,

  • the data shows it's not always a move forward.

  • - Yeah. So, what can we do about that?

  • How can we translate the festival representation into jobs?

  • - Well the things that you're talking

  • about the studio system.

  • Right? - Yeah.

  • - And all of those things are just based on data

  • but if you have a data-driven top 10 list

  • of the top 10 whoever the heck,

  • it's immediately a hidden default.

  • Because that list will never change.

  • If the big studios

  • who have the money to call the shots say,

  • "Well we're only gonna work with an A-list XYZ",

  • they're gonna look at that top 10 list

  • which is based on

  • everything that's come before it.

  • It will never change.

  • So, unless they decide that the metric

  • that's most important is not

  • that they're getting somebody from that A-list

  • and that they're actually changing representation

  • and that that list matters more,

  • It's not gonna change.

  • If you want to exist in any spaces,

  • it's not just Hollywood,

  • as a woman,

  • as a leader,

  • you have to do it courageously.

  • And you have to just start calling shots on your own

  • in the way that men have

  • for a really long time.

  • - So you have presented a social thriller to the world

  • but what would you like to be doing next?

  • Are you diving into the horror genre,

  • are you wanting to go in different directions?

  • - Well, I would say that

  • all of our projects are pretty left-of-center.

  • (laughs)

  • - Keeping it weird?

  • - Keeping it weird, yeah.

  • But they span the gamut of Art-house Horror

  • which works in analogy

  • and also just like comedy snob level.

  • Snobbery. (both laughing)

  • But we have our million dollar indie script

  • that we're polishing right now

  • which is this spiritual successor to Stucco.

  • We don't feel like we need to make the future version.

  • We've already told the story.

  • So, yeah.

  • I mean, we love this genre

  • because you know, you can really

  • examine the parts of ourselves

  • that we're not proud of in horror.

  • - Okay. So I have one more project

  • 'cause you have many many projects.

  • - Yeah. I mean, you know when this is like you have

  • to have 15 going simultaneous.

  • I was literally negotiating a contract in the car

  • on the way here

  • for something that nobody knows about.

  • Hopefully won't fall apart.

  • It's literally what it is.

  • You just have to keep doing it

  • over and over and over until one thing sticks.

  • My last question is actually about

  • you play Aniston in The Morning Show.

  • - I do. - And we wanna know

  • more about Aniston.

  • Well, next time you see research

  • and you let 'em know

  • or carry her in this brilliant showrunner.

  • Yeah.

  • You know, she's a very interesting person.

  • Again these are the things

  • that I discuss with the writers and that

  • it's just there's not enough real estate on the show

  • for you to be able to do.

  • But yeah,

  • Aniston is not a real name.

  • (laughs) And,

  • she is sort of a former pageant girl.

  • She's not like a pageant queen

  • but she's just sort of always found ways to win publicly

  • and I think the way that she's risen above all

  • of the Mitch, Mark

  • is that she doesn't care.

  • She is going to live way past The Morning Show.

  • This is a line on her resume

  • and as everybody else vies that I thrown,

  • she's like, "Go ahead.

  • "My Instagram following is way more important right now.

  • "'Cause it's gonna help me get the next thing."

  • - Wonderful.

  • (laughs)

  • Well, we're all looking forward to season two.

  • - We're shooting it right now also.

  • - Amazing.

  • I'm very excited to see what happens with season two.

  • Have so much fun at South by Southwest.

  • - Thank you. Are you going?

  • - No. - Okay.

  • But have so much fun at South by Southwest

  • and check out "The way back".

  • It's in theaters now.

  • - Yeah.

- I'm Janina Gavankar

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ザ・ウェイ・バック」スターのジャニナ・ギャヴァンカーが共演者ベン・アフレックと「マジカル・リアリズム」について語る|イン・スタジオ ('The Way Back' Star Janina Gavankar on Co-Star Ben Affleck & "Magical Realism" | In Studio)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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