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![]() by Paul Fischer |
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Angelina
Jolie admits that motherhood sometimes dictates
the kinds Jolie says that she has attained inspiration not
only from her son, but from
life. "I just want to live a very full life. I love making films
and am very
fortunate that I get to do them. I love being creative in this form,
but
there was a time when I think that I lived through my characters and
I've Part of that job is playing make believe and that fantasy element is truly exemplified in Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, in which she plays a one-eyed military commander helping the heroic hero of the title, played by Jude Law, to save the world. The difference between this film |
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| and your typical non-Star
Wars adventure is that the entire film was shot against a green screen,
with sequences set underwater and on massive battle ships. Jolie concedes
that shooting
the film was "a bit strange." I think that Jude and Gwyneth
[Paltrow] had it worse because they had things coming at them that they
were freaking out about, while I had ships coming in behind me and things
like that. But I think that as actors, we tend to play make believe all
the time, so we're used to a fake room or fake set." Jolie says
that doing a film like this, in which you totally depend on imagination,
is part of the fantasy element she enjoys as an actor. "There was
one moment where I had the bubble on and the eye patch where I was just
sitting on a box and wasn't in a plane or anywhere. I was just in a room
full of a hundred people, my English accent had to be very cool and I
was just sitting on this cardboard box pretending that I was sitting
on something completely different. At first it felt very silly and then
I think that it's great to get back to what's fun about this business.
It's creative and you try things that aren't safe, get to be silly again
and be bold with your choices, which was nice and refreshing."
Jolie says that she was drawn to this unique adventure story because "I just thought that as an artist it was something that was original and hadn't been done before, so it was kind of a brave place to be. There was a bit of everyone going in and trying for something and I miss that spirit of things a lot. When you do films these days, you just lose that sense of fun and adventure and 'Let's try something that hasn't been done before.' So for that, just to be a part of it was exciting, but I also loved my character." The actress's imagination was further put to the test as one of the fishy voices of Shark Tale, in which she plays "the bad fish. To do an animated film is a very different experience and this was an amazing process. I was just trying to make voices and I hate my own voice. Like most people, you listen to yourself on the phone or an answering machine and you're like, 'Ugh', and so to do something with just your voice is hard." Jolie laughingly recalls her initial meeting on Shark Tale. "When I was invited in to meet with them on Shark Tale, they brought me into this room and there were all these different pictures of fish. They explained to me what I was to do. I looked around and saw this fish that I could 'see' Will Smith doing. I looked at this other fish with this big red mouth and pointy eyebrows. I thought, 'They can talk as long as they want. I know that I'm that fish.' I saw her immediately, I knew it and I liked her. It was me just kind of filling those shoes because they made her very sparkly and sexy." While these two films reinforced Jolie's inner child, working on Oliver Stone's Alexander, in which she plays Olympias, represented a different challenge for the Oscar winner. "I loved doing Alexander! I think that as an actor, it has a soul. [I] can go through so many different emotions and analyze myself, the world and my relationships. When you're done with that film you feel like you've really grown and changed." As for working with the often prickly Oliver Stone, Jolie chooses her words carefully in describing her relationship with the contentious director. "I think that you can agree or disagree with Oliver or where he's coming from, but you can't kind of debate who he is. He is who he is and he's coming very straightforward with everything, which I appreciated. He didn't allow anyone to be safe. If anything, he demands a certain kind of commitment and bravery and doesn't allow for anyone to kind of get too relaxed. He pushes things so that they're more and he does know life more than most people and has lived very fully in his life. So when he does films that deal with war, loss, love, pain and relationships, then he's drawing from a very deep well." Working with Stone was an intense experience. "With him you can't really come in and say, 'I don't feel like, or I'm not sure of, or I'd like to change this, or give me a few more minutes to get in this place.' He wanted me to be [Olympias] and he wanted me to come on set as her. He wanted us all to live as our characters. He'd get upset if I lost my accent when we were out to dinner." Jolie also hopes to produce a film based on another historical character, that of Russia's Catherine the Great. Here is an actress clearly inspired by women of the past, and this one has always held a particular fascination for her. "I love those historical characters, but I do think that they need to be done right, which is why it's never been a situation where I'm certainly doing that. That one, the more I've researched her the more I think that her story is very complicated and needs to be done correctly, so I get nervous that they could be done wrong. I take it seriously especially if it's a whole people's country or a people's hero. To step into that and say, 'Okay I'm going to be this woman that you revere or respect or like or dislike, she's a part of your history,' then I just take that more seriously. I want to make sure that it's how people see her and it represents who she actually was. So I'm fascinated by those kinds of women, such as Olympias, who wasn't everyone's favorite woman. She was a bit dark, but I still wanted to try and respect who I thought she was." One character who will not resurface again is Lara Croft. "Look, I loved doing those movies, I learned so much and I had a great time, but I tend to not want to do them again." Jolie's other priority remains her son, and to give him the kind of joyous sense of family that she missed out on as a child, especially at Christmas. " I've never really had a great Christmas, because I come from a separated home. So having a child I always thought, 'I better get the tree, I better get this, and I better make a home and Christmas.' Instead, I ended up deciding that I would show him the world every Christmas. So this past Christmas, I took him to see the Pyramids on Christmas day, and I've decided that every Christmas I will take him somewhere else. I'm trying to figure out this year what it's going to be. I'm looking at world heritage sites from the Taj Mahal to the Amazon," she smiles. As to whether the actress plans to adopt again she is keeping her cards very close to her chest. "I haven't met a child, I'm always in the process and I've kind of done all my paperwork in case that day comes. I'll always live like that having done it so much on the American side, so if I went into an orphanage tomorrow and it felt right, for whatever reason I'd do it." Jolie continues to pursue other passions, including flying. "I have learned to fly and it's great. I've been flying solo and bought a plane." It's all part of Jolie's consistent sense of adventure which shows no signs of slowing down. | |||