The
Ring 2
ART
IMITATES LIFE FOR WATTS’ ELLIE PARKER.
EXCLUSIVE Naomi Watts Interview.
Before
she became an international celebrity, before she was clutched
by a giant ape or scared of a Ring or two, British-born Aussie
Naomi Watts was unknown, struggling and determined to find
herself in a town willing to chew
up those who can’t stomach rejection. Back then, Watts
starred in a cute, funny and true-to-life short film, Ellie
Parker, a hit at Sundance at a time when most of the world
was still waiting to discover Naomi Watts. That was then,
this is now, and this time she returns to Sundance older and
wiser, in the midst of shooting Peter Jackson’s King
Kong with her sequel to The Ring about to open. At Sundance
for a little over a day, she spoke exclusively to PAUL FISCHER
who, of course, has known Naomi through both extremes of her
career, as they both recalled.
Dressed
to the hilt in appropriate winter gear, Naomi Watts is full
of
energy during her brief sojourn at the Sundance Film Festival.
As we sit
upstairs in a Park City restaurant, Watts laughingly recalls
her first visit
to this wintry, but crazy film festival, when she was the
one frantically
calling journalists such as myself, begging us to cover this
little short
she both starred in and produced, Ellie Parker. “We
were literally accosting
people on the street, begging them, throwing flyers in their
face,” she
recalls laughingly. Four years or so later, and how the mighty
have risen.
The irony does not escape the blond actress, whose Ellie Parker
cuts close
to her own life, in the story of a naïve Australian actress
in Hollywood
going from audition to audition, ready to finally give up
her dream of being
an actress. Both the short and subsequent feature, which was
shot on and off
over the last few years, co-starred her close friend Rebecca
Rigg, now
married with children, living with actor/husband Simon Baker
in Malibu.
While
Ellie Parker seems almost autobiographical, Watts tries to
downplay
the apparent parallels between her life as a struggling actor,
and that of her fictional alter ego. “I mean it’s
true that there are moments that happen in the film, that
were inspired by pieces of truth from our own lives, but obviously
it’s completely heightened reality and variations of
the truth as well. You know, Scott [Coffey, director] was
a struggling actor for many years as well and he’d gone
through years of those horrible auditions, losing your dignity
and being told who you are and believing it because of your
self-esteem levels. so yeah, when Scott and I as actors worked
together, a couple of times, we talked about these experiences,
and
he had had this idea that he’d been thinking about to
do this film about an actress going from one audition to another.
That was the original idea, and then it kind of just grew
and evolved,” Watts explains. “I can see the temptation
to draw a parallel but it’s really not my life, it’s
the combination of Scott’s, Rebecca’s and all
of our experiences thrown in and shaking it.”
Yet, like
Ellie Parker in the film, both Ellie and Naomi were at times
willing to give it up, but somehow manage to find this professional
far too irresistible. “You can’t give it up,”
Watts adds with a low laughter, comparing acting to an addictive
drug. She says that what makes acting so addictive, is “because
you love what you do. It’s the creative thing that when
you’re actually acting, between action and cut, THAT
is fun, or even in the drama class or whatever forum you’re
doing it in. It’s the other stuff
that’s horrible – the exposing yourself,”
referring to the often debilitating audition process that
she embarked upon for almost a decade prior to her attention-grabbing
role in Mulholland Drive.
“That’s what Ellie Parker is more about, not just
about the acting experiences, auditions, managers, agents
and stuff, but about a young woman who is putting too much
emphasis on other people’s opinions of herself, and
therefore wrapping up her own identity in these people who
couldn’t possibly know who she was. So
that struggle for integrity and identity is more of what we
were trying to say,” Watts insists.
The days
of those endless auditions may be over for Naomi, but she
constantly returns to the small film arena which challenges
her. This year alone, Watts will be carrying three major films:
The Ring Two, Stay and the
gorilla of them all, King Kong. “It’s a beautiful
juxtaposition, working on probably the most expensive movie
of the year as well as the cheapest movie of the year,”
she says, laughingly, referring to Ellie Parker and Kong.
“But the intention remains the same and my commitment
to what I’m doing is exactly the same. It’s fun
to go from these totally polar, opposite worlds.”
While
Watts did not need to appear in this week’s Ring Two,
the actress concedes she was contractually obliged to star
in the spooky thriller. “Back then, I really didn't
have the power of choice,” Watts concedes, yet having
said that, she had no qualms revisiting the world of The Ring,
this time directed by Hideo Nakata, who helmed the original.
“The first one was a good script, the film did very,
very well and it went beyond a genre piece, with an extreme
character in it which is quite rare in a genre, where there
is usually just running and screaming,” the actress
explains. "The Ring 2" picks up six months after
the horrifying events that terrorized Rachel Keller (Watts)
and her son Aidan (David Dorfman) in Seattle. To escape her
haunting memories, Rachel takes Aidan and moves to the small
coastal community of Astoria, Oregon, to start fresh. However,
Rachel's resolve quickly turns to dread when evidence at a
local crime scene - including an unmarked videotape - seems
eerily familiar. Rachel realizes that the vengeful Samara
is back and more determined than ever to continue her relentless
cycle of terror and death. Watts says that her “character
had a lot more substance and it was about confronting the
situation, the psychological aspects to it, and moral dilemmas,
which I think have come up again in the sequel. They took
a long time with the script, DreamWorks are very clever people,
they know how to make it right and they persisted. We have
a great director, who directed the original one, and we have
a great cast. I think there is always that fear of doing any
sequel but we took our time in trying to make it the best
we could, while also give a nod to the audience."
Still
in New Zealand shooting King Kong, Watts has no doubts as
to why Kong
is a huge film she as more than keen to become a part of.
“It’s going great. I love it. It’s fantastic.
Peter Jackson and his team of people are just extraordinary,”
Watts enthuses. Meanwhile, Watts is not thinking about the
pressures of headlining such a highly anticipated and expensive
movie. "I try not to pay attention to it. I show up on
the day and give it my all. I'm as committed to that film
as I am committed to something like Ellie Parker.” As
long as this journalist has known Watts, from Flirting to
Kong, the one constant is that she is as hard on herself now,
as she was throughout her burgeoning career. “I'm my
worst critic. I have a little bit more confidence that it
won't all go away tomorrow and I don't have to do everything
that
comes along." Indeed, Watts is finally ready not to give
up quite yet.
THE RING TWO OPENS ON FRIDAY.
Paul
Fischer