Los Angeles Times

Paula Patton wants your attention

She sees a chance to raise national awareness about sex traffickin­g by getting behind the movie ‘Traffik.’

- By Sonaiya Kelley

In one haunting moment from Liongate’s upcoming thriller “Traffik,” a young woman is drugged and loaded into a waiting truck by sex trafficker­s after having spent much of the night running for her life. Nina Simone’s stirring “Strange Fruit” punctuates the scene, a touch that filmmaker Deon Taylor calls a “spiritual moment” intended to draw a parallel between traffickin­g and that other institutio­n that commodifie­s people held against their will.

“I had to put that in there because [traffickin­g] is the modernday slavery,” Taylor said.

“Traffik,” which was “shot with a microbudge­t,” was produced in part by its star Paula Patton’s Third Eye Production­s.

“[Producing] is the only way to get the types of stories that I want to see made,” Patton recently said in Los Angeles. “You can’t sit there and hope — that’s infuriatin­g and maddening. So you must create your own future.”

After small roles in the Will Smith rom-com “Hitch” and lowbudget thriller “London,” Patton graduated to leading-lady status as André Benjamin’s love interest in the 2006 Outkast musical “Idlewild.” For the next few years she was one of Hollywood’s “It” girls,” costarring opposite Denzel Washington (“Deja Vu”), Kevin Costner (“Swing Vote”) and Kiefer Sutherland (“Mirrors”).

A critically acclaimed turn in the Oscar-nominated film “Precious” proved to be another breakthrou­gh, and Patton went on to headline a pair of rare rom-coms marketed toward black audiences (“Baggage Claim” and “Jumping the Broom”). She also landed in blockbuste­r titles both successful (2011’s “Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol”) and not (2016’s “Warcraft”). But nowadays, the 42-yearold actress says she’s interested only in roles

that excite her. “At this time in my life I want to be moved. I want to be inspired, and I want to hopefully do work that moves people as well,” Patton said. “At the end of the day the weird thing about what we [actors] do is that it’s work and art. And to do both I feel like I have to love what I’m doing. I don’t want to just do it if it’s just work. Not anymore.”

“Traffik” came to Patton through her friendship with Codeblack Films Chief Executive Jeff Clanagan, whose company partnered with Lionsgate in 2012 to release films targeted at African American audiences. Codeblack’s most recent success was last summer’s Tupac Shakur biopic “All Eyez on Me.”

“He said, ‘Paula, I really want you to meet this director, and he’s sent this script and I think it would be great for you,’ ” Patton said of Clanagan’s pitch. “We kind of had fun, creative conversati­ons — Deon, Jeff and myself. When they wanted to go [into production] I was signed on to do another movie. And then at the last minute they lost the money ... I was, like, ‘Jeff, I’m available.’

“It’s one of those weird sort of magical things: I said ‘I’ll do it’ and a week later I was in Sacramento prepping and five days later we were shooting the movie.”

The film, which Taylor wrote, directed and produced through his Hidden Empire Film Group, was shot in Northern California’s Placer County, where the director lives with his wife, Roxanne Avent, a producer on the film,. The project was inspired by true events.

“We started getting emails about kids being trafficked in our city and at the mall,” Taylor said over tea in downtown L.A. “I remember thinking, ‘Well, black people don’t get trafficked so we’re cool.’”

“But actually, [40% of victims] that are trafficked are African American,” interjecte­d Avent.

“And as I realized just how dumb my thought was,” continued Taylor.

In his research, Taylor found that cities with large communitie­s living below the poverty line (including Oakland, San Francisco, Baltimore, Watts and Chicago) were most vulnerable to traffickin­g, due in part to high rates of kids in foster care.

“I started researchin­g more and more, and that’s when I said, ‘Man, I want to do something around this,’” he said.

Filming in Placer County occupied several locations where traffickin­g stings actually took place. While shooting at a gas station that figures heavily in the film, Taylor was approached by a police officer who’d helped take down trafficker­s not long before: 15 miles up the road in a residentia­l community local police acquired a search warrant after noticing five or six girls leaving the same house every night at midnight and returning at 4 a.m.

Upon raiding the house, the officers found 40 women and girls undergroun­d in a cave that was obscured by a carpet “like ‘Silence of the Lambs,’ ” Taylor said.

Avent describes “Traffik” as a “love story turned into a thriller.” Its mix of social issues with pulpy genre elements recalls gritty films from the ’70s — some might even describe it as a modernday grind house movie.

For his part, Taylor wanted to avoid falling into the trap of genre films that have no interest in grappling with the nightmaris­h reality of their subject matter. “I was really drawn to the challenge of trying to figure out how to put this type of backdrop into a thriller and not make it ‘Taken,’ ” Taylor said, citing the 2008 Liam Neeson hit.

Patton hoped to create a film that would be as entertaini­ng as it was educationa­l. “For it to be great entertainm­ent [the issue] needs to be in the background,” she said. “I think that that’s when art can be its most impactful socially because then you can reach so many people.

“People don’t want to feel forced to do anything. And I don’t think we should force anyone. It’s about bringing the truth to the surface and making people aware. And then they can make their own minds up about what they feel or what they want to do about it.”

Patton’s character, Brea, gets swept up in the world of traffickin­g while on a romantic getaway with her boyfriend, John, played by Omar Epps. The role required Patton to film several intimate scenes, something that no longer fazes the actress. “I’m fairly comfortabl­e, to be honest with you,” Patton said of shooting the scenes. “I think as I’ve gotten older I care less what everyone thinks. I realize I’ve become … not an exhibition­ist but a nudist. And I think that anybody that works around me knows that I’m naked a lot.”

It was also important to both Patton and Taylor that although the film is about sex slavery, Brea should be a sexually confident woman to emphasize the distance between consensual and nonconsens­ual sex.

“The scenes with her in the bed with Omar [Epps’ character] … what I’m demonstrat­ing is how freely love comes when you’re in love,” Taylor explained. “How free sexuality is when you’re in love with your partner. There are no boundaries. And then when the movie flips and everything happens, that same touch is cold. That same environmen­t is different. And the tone of the movie changes.”

Patton, a graduate of USC’s film school, once dreamed of becoming a director, even making her own short films. “It’s something that’s close to my heart,” she said. “I like the idea of bringing people together and making great entertainm­ent.”

During a soul-searching attempt to write a screenplay, Patton realized she preferred to be on the other side of the camera.

“I just had this moment where I was sitting at my desk and I realized what it was that I’d been wanting to do since I was a little girl — and that was act,” she said.

These days Patton feels she’s found the perfect mix as both an actress and a producer. “I’m not in a mood to fight for things,” she said. “But I do feel like working hard to try to create projects I’m passionate about.”

 ?? Scott Everett White Codeblack Films ?? THE PREVALENCE of sex traffickin­g is highlighte­d in the movie “Traffik.” Paula Patton is at right with Roselyn Sanchez.
Scott Everett White Codeblack Films THE PREVALENCE of sex traffickin­g is highlighte­d in the movie “Traffik.” Paula Patton is at right with Roselyn Sanchez.
 ?? GIna Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? PAULA PATTON is now intent on being involved in “work that moves people.”
GIna Ferazzi Los Angeles Times PAULA PATTON is now intent on being involved in “work that moves people.”

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