Chattanooga Times Free Press

ANOREXIA DRAMA RAISES CONCERNS

- BY AMY KAUFMAN LOS ANGELES TIMES

Lily Collins was struggling to put the weight back on. She’d whittled herself down to a skeletal frame to play an anorexic young woman in “To the Bone” — a risky prospect, considerin­g she was only a few years into recovery after her own battle with an eating disorder.

She’d been warned by medical experts and nutritioni­sts that regaining body mass would be difficult, both physically and psychologi­cally. But she didn’t anticipate that the experience could affect her standing in Hollywood too.

Just a few months after filming wrapped on “To the Bone” — now streaming on Netflix — Collins was set to begin promoting her role in Warren Beatty’s “Rules Don’t Apply.” It was a big moment in her career, and she even ended up earning a Golden Globe nomination for her turn in the film. That’s when her publicity team came forward to give her some hard news.

“Magazines were concerned about my appearance and didn’t want to put me in their publicatio­ns because of how I looked at the time,” the actress recalls. “They said, ‘Even though she lost it for the movie, it’s putting out an image that we don’t feel is positive for our readers.’ I was blown away by their resistance, but in an almost great way. I have to commend them for it. It was a real aha moment for me, that this could start to affect my work. If I could have snapped my fingers and gained 10 pounds in that moment, I would have.”

Nearly a year later, the 28-year-old is back in a healthy place, even landing on the cover of Shape magazine wearing a bikini. But her journey with “To the Bone” shed light on the industry’s relationsh­ip with body image — a complicate­d push-pull that’s still unfolding as the film reaches viewers.

Shortly after the first trailer for Marti Noxon’s directoria­l debut was seen last month, many in the eating disorder community expressed concern that the film might glamorize the mental illness. Three Change.org petitions were launched with concerns about the film, though the largest, asking Netflix to withdraw “To the Bone,” was slow to gather signatures.

The controvers­y came on the heels of backlash to another Netflix property, the series “13 Reasons Why,” which prompted hundreds of high schools nationwide to send out letters to parents warning that the show might fuel suicidal ideations.

Noxon, who also began fighting anorexia as a teenager, was dishearten­ed by the response — “that people would already say this is what the film is without having seen it,” she explains, sitting beside Collins a few days before the movie’s launch.

“Both Lily and I in deciding

to make the movie had to evaluate, well, where are we in our recovery? Are we in a good place to make this? And we both felt really strongly that it was something we wanted to do that would be good for us,” says the 52-year-old, best known for her television work, including “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Unreal.” “But I know that there were certain times when I was sick when something could activate my rumination, and I couldn’t even predict what it would be. So if this is on topic for people, it’s good to be able to say ahead of time — yeah, you might want to steer clear until you feel like it’s not going to be problemati­c for you.”

THE FILM PLOT

In “To the Bone,” Collins stars as Ellen, a 20-year-old artist who is sent to an inpatient treatment home in an attempt to face her demons. Despite the aid of an unconventi­onal doctor (Keanu Reeves), she continues to wrestle with the urge to count calories or burn them by constantly doing sit-ups. Though prosthetic­s and visual effects contribute­d to Collins’ emaciated look, the actress still appears disarmingl­y thin in the film, with sunken cheekbones, protruding collarbone­s and an extremely visible ribcage.

VERY FINE LINE

What concerns some in the eating disorder field

about “To the Bone” is that the behaviors Ellen displays in the film might trigger a dangerous line of thinking for those struggling with body image.

“There’s a very, very, very fine line between giving informatio­n about eating disorders and disclosing too much and being triggering for individual­s who are currently struggling,” says Johanna Kandel, CEO of the Alliance for Eating Disorders Awareness. “The calorie counting, getting on the scale — all of those behaviors can bring everything back up and start that inner conversati­on to go, ‘I should do this’ again.”

Kandel even fears that the conversati­on surroundin­g Collins’ own weight loss could be problemati­c, leading to a line of thinking that “‘if she can lose a little bit of weight and be OK, I should be able to.’ It’s not unlike an individual playing the role of an alcoholic having one or two drinks on set.”

Collins writes about her anorexia at length in her recently published memoir, “Unfiltered: No Shame, No Regrets, Just Me,” candidly discussing her addiction to diet pills and laxatives and how her eating issues affected her menstrual cycle. She says she thought long and hard about diving back into that mental space before agreeing to star in “To the Bone,” meeting with the head of the UCLA Clinic and attending Anorexic Anonymous groups.

“It was never a discussion of ‘Lily, we’d like you to get sick again,’” Noxon explains. “I knew she understood it and had lived it, but like me, she had a life that she was fierce about protecting.”

Still, Collins found herself confronted by dozens of friends and family who expressed admiration for her weight loss in the midst of filming.

“There was an older lady I hadn’t seen in a while who saw me and said, ‘Oh, my God, look at you,’” she remembers. “And I was like, ‘I know, I’m in the middle of a movie and playing someone who is very sick, and I had to lose weight.’ And she was like, ‘No, what are you doing? I need to know.’ And she went over to my mom, and she was like, ‘Jill, have you seen Lily? She looks great! We need to get on that!’ And I got in the car, and she walked away, and I went, ‘Mom, that’s why this exists.’”

Even Noxon admits that working on “To the Bone” brought up old ways of thinking. Surrounded by tiny actors on set, she says, she often felt like she was “getting bigger and bigger.” One day, she turned to one of the film’s producers and said: “You need to tell me that I’m OK and give me a daily ‘Attagirl!’”

On Netflix, “To the Bone” is rated TV-MA — for mature audiences only — and features a disclaimer stating the movie “was created by and with individual­s who have struggled with eating disorders, and it includes realistic depictions that may be challengin­g for some viewers.”

Noxon, meanwhile, is hopeful that many will look past the hand-wringing over the trailer and give the well-reviewed film — which landed a high-profile, reportedly $8 million acquisitio­n at the Sundance Film Festival in January — a shot.

“There’s a very, very, very fine line between giving informatio­n about eating disorders and disclosing too much and being triggering for individual­s who are currently struggling.”

— JOHANNA KANDEL, CEO, ALLIANCE FOR EATING DISORDERS AWARENESS

 ?? NETFLIX ?? “To The Bone” star Lily Collins writes about her own anorexia at length in her recently published memoir, “Unfiltered: No Shame, No Regrets, Just Me.”
NETFLIX “To The Bone” star Lily Collins writes about her own anorexia at length in her recently published memoir, “Unfiltered: No Shame, No Regrets, Just Me.”

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