
HANNA
Q and A With Director Joe Wright Q: What drew you to make Hanna?
Joe Wright: The script was full of particular elements of interest to me,
with
an atmosphere that I was intrigued by. But there was lots of space left in it,
and I mean that as a compliment – there was space left for me to invest my
own feelings and concerns.
First and foremost, what interested me was the character of Hanna; we don't
see enough films with a teenaged female protagonist. Thematically, I've always
been intrigued by characters who are holy fools – like E.T., Chauncey Gardiner
in Being There, and Kaspar Hauser in Werner Herzog's movie – and who are not
really of this world. Those last two, especially, have grown up in a world that
doesn't have the pressures of outside society and so-called civilization. They
come into our world with an adult consciousness but with the naïveté of a
child. I find it fascinating how someone like that experiences the world,
because it offers us a subjective opportunity to see things afresh.
Q: So you wanted to put a character like that through their paces –
JW: Well, it's about looking through their eyes. My work is generally quite
subjective, from one character's point of view; Atonement appears to be a
three-stranded narrative, but actually the whole thing is seen through the
prism of Briony's guilt. I like fairly extreme "realities;” the schizophrenic's
in
The Soloist would be another example.
Q: Perhaps you couldn't have made Hanna until after you'd done The Soloist,
because there's a great deal of externalized activity to the character's reality
in that, which may have been good preparation for the action Hanna is central
to in this…?
JW: Maybe. When one finishes a film, one never really knows what one has
learned from it until one puts it into practice for the next movie.
For my craft, the action elements of the story did attract me. I've always
thought of action as being pure cinema, because the same effect can't be
achieved in any other medium; dialogue can be played out onstage or on radio,
and beautiful pictures can be photographed or painted. Apart from sports
coverage, there isn't anywhere else that you can find anything like it.
I wanted to experiment with the visceral impact, delivering it but perhaps in
a
slightly different way. I was thinking back to the French New Wave, and Robert
Bresson's Pickpocket. Those sequences where the pickpockets are at work are
extraordinarily beautifully choreographed action sequences. By which, I don't
mean with fighting and punching and kicking; you're telling the story through
the actions of a body, of a character.
For a far more personal reason, what drew me to Hanna was its female
protagonist. A very dear friend of mine was raped around the time that I was
reading the script, and I was so angry; I had been thinking about how women
are placed within society, and about what it means to be a young woman in
today's cultural climate. I look around, and I wonder whatever happened to
feminism; it wasn't meant to be a passing fashion, it was meant to change the
world forever. I'm appalled by the sexualization of teenagers, and by Hello!
Magazine culture. These things scare me. There was an impulse to create, as a
response to what happened to my friend, a strong female character who had
grown up outside of gender sexual politics, who had never met another woman,
never seen advertising nor had a clue what lip gloss was.
I was interested in juxtaposing Hanna with the [vacationing] family –
especially
Sophie and [mother] Rachel. As a creature of today, Sophie is a contrast to
Hanna. I wanted to explore these two different images of teenage girls. Sophie
is ridiculously infatuated with the whole prevalent teenage girl culture, and I
saw in Rachel a lot of women I know – of my generation and a bit older – who
have lost their way in terms of their feminist socio-political ideals. I worry
for
them, and for their children too. A bit heavy, but that's what I was thinking
about…
Q: Hanna's most extensive scenes with another female character are those
with Sophie. Both of the actresses, Saoirse Ronan and Jessica Barden, perform
at a high caliber.
JW: I would let Saoirse and Jessica take the lead; the kiss between them was
suggested by Saoirse. She said she thought it was what Hanna would do. Saoirse
and I also talked about how Hanna has no preconception of what is beautiful
and what is ugly. Everything just is what it is; one of the core aspects for us,
which Saoirse portrays beautifully, was that Hanna judges no one. That's
anathema to most of us, as we are brought up and taught to constantly judge
people, places, and things against ourselves, our aspirations, and our fears.
Q: Around the time of Atonement, you said that Saoirse has the empathy to
feel and express the emotions of another human being. But how did you both
prepare her to play this unique character?
JW: Going back again to what drew me to make this movie, the real dealbreaker
was Saoirse; if she hadn't been involved, I'm not sure that I would
have felt confident in going ahead with the film. Once I knew that she was on
board – and had wanted me to direct – then I felt, "We can do this.” Because
my safety net was, you can just put the camera on Saoirse in close-up – what
she's thinking – and that will see you through a scene.
But Saoirse and I talked lots, including about emotions. On Atonement, she
and
I started with just how Briony might walk. The character grew from the short,
precise, controlling steps that she made. On Hanna, we worked with [stunt
coordinator and fight choreographer] Jeff Imada to create a very centered
being, someone who stood grounded and balanced with a relaxed yet good
posture. Hanna doesn't have the nervous twitches or slanted shoulders that
come from years of social interaction. [Laughs]
Her movements as Hanna are quite aerodynamic, though I was forever telling
Saoirse to hold her elbows in when she ran; she has that natural tendency to
flail them about.
Hanna doesn't move unless, or until, she has to. Her eyes don't "find”
something; they go straight to it. She also doesn't really make any outward
facial expressions, apart from when she's fighting and becomes almost
animalistic – with snarling.
The voice was quite important as well; once Saoirse had the centered
physicality of Hanna, she found something of an ethereal voice for the
character. At the same time, I got her to lower her voice about an octave or
two. That made Saoirse feel slightly more of the earth; therefore, she was
simultaneously capturing the earth and the air that characterize Hanna. At 16,
Saoirse now has even more of a handle on her craft than she did at 12.
Q: With Marissa, we're seeing a very different Cate Blanchett portrayal…
JW: Marissa is kind of based on a primary school teacher I had! Her name was
Priscilla, and she was sexy and well-kept. She wore thick make-up and
stockings that had a sheen and made noise when she walked. At story time, the
girls used to sit and stroke her legs as they sat around her. She had this vibe,
and she came to mind when I was thinking about Marissa; since Hanna is also a
fairy tale, I was conceiving of the characters as archetypes and then layering
them with character specifics. So Marissa was a combination of Priscilla,
President George W. Bush, and a wicked witch; in my parents' puppet shows,
the witches had red hair and wore green, so I asked [costume designer] Lucie
Bates to always have Marissa wearing green, and the red hair suits Cate very
well I think.
Cate is not a vain actor at all, and was up for wearing too much make-up; I
wante
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