Vancouver Sun

TALKIN’ TULLY

Stars agree cinematic storytelli­ng is falling far short of television

- LINDSEY BAHR

Charlize Theron had wanted to work again with screenwrit­er Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman since the movie Young Adult, in which Theron got to play a true mess of a character — alcoholic, all-around stunted and viciously hilarious.

So when Cody dreamt up the idea for Tully, a somewhat undefinabl­e look at the harsh, messy and often funny realities of motherhood, Theron didn’t even have to read the script before saying yes to playing the mother of three, who finally decides to let someone into her life to help in the form of a night nanny, Tully, played by Mackenzie Davis.

The two actresses spoke recently about this unconventi­onal movie.

Q Mackenzie, how did you join this team?

Theron Well the actress that we wanted wasn’t available, but she was a close friend of my agent ...

Davis And so I snuck through the grapevine. No, Jason told me about it. I was a diehard fan of Young Adult. And the role is so lovely. It’s something I hadn’t played before. I found it really nurturing to be in that role to another woman. That’s so much of how you are with your friends. And it’s such an important part of my life and a nourishing part of my life that it was nice to perform that on film and with Charlize.

Q I was a little worried she might be a sort of manic pixie dream night nanny at the beginning, but that’s not the case at all.

Theron You go there because we’ve been fed that for so long, this misconcept­ion that women could never be supportive of one another. Like, you would definitely just try to steal my husband from me. And we make fun of that in the movie.

Davis I’ve seen some of that stuff already from the trailer. People being like, “Well of course she (expletives) the husband.” And I’m like well it might be different than what you think.

Q And the men are almost a sideshow here.

Theron Sometimes you’re super grateful when you get that. A lot of men won’t do that for women. I’m just grateful whenever a man will walk on, and I had this with James McAvoy on Atomic Blonde, when you have a guy who is like, “yeah, I’m here to support you, and I’m OK with that.”

Davis It is so hard to find a good actor who has some career trajectory who is willing to play a secondary part.

Theron And that’s wrong. Ron (Livingston, showed up every single day so invested in the whole thing. When a man does that it means a lot to me. Davis It’s putting your money where your mouth is.

Q Charlize, how did you decide on the physicalit­y of your character?

Theron I’ve had a lot of very, very close friends of mine go through pregnancie­s and I’ve had a front seat to it all, and it’s not even that we had a conversati­on about it, I think it was a nobrainer. It was just impossible for me to even imagine playing a woman who is giving birth to her third child on page 10 and not thinking what the aftermath would be. I wanted to get as close as I possibly could do that. It would be hard for me to be like, “oh, I’ll just pretend.” I’m just not that good. I can’t do it. Not that I’m method, but the physical part, maybe it goes back to being a dancer most of my life. That physical storytelli­ng is almost more important to me than the verbal storytelli­ng.

Q This is coming out alongside some blockbuste­rs and at a time when the movie business is in flux. Are you worried at all about the film industry?

Davis I think part of the reason people stopped going to the movies is it’s (expletive) boring to just watch explosions all the time. You want something else and some reason to have a communal experience.

Theron I wouldn’t say I’m worried about the film industry, but I think that what’s happening in streaming and on television is something that we in film, well, we have to step it up a little bit. There are way more conflictin­g characters on television and storylines, especially for women, than there is in film.

Davis And playing with form in TV. Like have you watched Atlanta?

Theron Yeah, it’s amazing. Davis It’s like jazz. It’s this experiment­al thing.

Theron Or The End of the F---ing World? The way they go about telling that story, you don’t see that on film anymore — being brave and experiment­al and going about the best way to tell the story, when I think a lot of the time (in film) we’re putting the cart before the horse like “this audience, this audience.” Television doesn’t function like that. It’s just good storytelli­ng. I remember going in and pitching TV shows and having TV execs say, “Can you go further with that?” and then finding myself in film pitching something and hearing, “That’s a little too much.” I think we have to step up to the plate because the bar has been set really, really high by a lot of great shows in television.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Charlize Theron, left, and Mackenzie Davis were both eager to work with Jason Reitman and Diablo Cody, who share a love of brave storytelli­ng and unconventi­onal tales.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Charlize Theron, left, and Mackenzie Davis were both eager to work with Jason Reitman and Diablo Cody, who share a love of brave storytelli­ng and unconventi­onal tales.

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