The Province

Paris a reprieve more than a dalliance for Diane Lane

- BOB THOMPSON bthompson@postmedia.com

Diane Lane likes movie extremes. Next fall, for instance, she reprises her role of Superman’s adoptive mother Martha Kent in the superhero extravagan­za Justice League.

This spring Lane’s the headliner in the indie picture Paris Can Wait.

It is Eleanor Coppola’s quasi-autobiogra­phical story of her car trip from the Cannes Film Festival to Paris without her husband Oscar-winning director Francis Ford Coppola.

It took Eleanor, the 81-year-old documentar­y filmmaker, six years to find funding for her directoria­l debut. But Lane was always her first choice to play the lead. In the movie, Lane’s Anne is at the Cannes Film Festival with her producer husband Michael (Alec Baldwin). When Michael jets off from Cannes to a Budapest film set, Anne accepts a car ride from the south of France to Paris with her husband’s flirtatiou­s business partner Jacques (Arnaud Viard).

During an interview in L.A., Lane, 52, discusses the comedy-drama and her penchant for variety.

Q: Can you compare working on Justice League and Paris Can Wait?

A: It’s all crazy, sometimes for the smallest things on the biggest production­s.

What do you mean?

You can have a very expensive filming day with helicopter­s and holding traffic, and there’s a green screen. And then it can be all about a hairpin. My kingdom for a hairpin, because now your blowing hair doesn’t match the last shot. It’s amazing how much it’s about hair.

Did you enjoy the intimacy of Paris Can Wait?

It’s a film that doesn’t have explosions and a wild car chase and lot of things that happen in movies today. So it was different and fresh to me. A film like this feels like a reprieve more than a dalliance.

The food looks delicious at the various dining stops. How was that to shoot?

It was fun, and I know it all looks delicious. They should give a disclaimer about not coming to the movie with an empty stomach.

Did you enjoy your collaborat­ion with Eleanor (Coppola)?

She’s great. Eleanor is a collaborat­or first and foremost, and she’s a nurturer and empowered and she has her own kind of confidence.

Did you feel the role was tailored for you?

I was offered the part in 2013 but I didn’t have time. Fast forward two years later and I did have the time. In the interim, the script was a little richer and there were more twists.

Did you have concerns about working with a first-time director?

Oh sure, I always have concerns. Many a slip between cup and lip. But Eleanor is a strong leader on set for the actors and the crew and she was under tight (budget) circumstan­ces in a foreign culture.

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— WENN.COM DIANE LANE

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