The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Universal story

‘Tenderness and emotion’ at the core of ‘Disobedien­ce’ Rachel Weisz explains the impetus behind latest project

- By Amy Longsdorf For Digital First Media

with whom she’s still deeply in love.

Weisz found the film’s look at a cloistered world one of its most fascinatin­g qualities.

“It’s set three stops on the Tube from where I grew up in London so it’s near but far,” says Weisz, an Oscar winner for “The Constant Gardener.”

“It could have been set in the Amish community or the Mennonite community, like “Witness,” which was about a different kind of sexuality, but also about forbidden love.”

Over the course of the movie, Ronit and Esti acknowledg­e their attraction to each other and eventually come together for a passionate encounter.

Weisz says she was determined that the sequence be performed without any sense of inhibition.

“In a way, the [love] scene was much more important than [love scenes] have been in any film I’ve made before,” she says. “Sex scenes can often feel gratuitous and you think, “Could the story do without this? Yeah, it probably could.”

“In this case, absolutely not. It was the center, the heart of the movie, because everything was leading up to this explosion of freedom, particular­ly from Esti.

“So it was essential storytelli­ng...I’ve never done a sex scene that was that emotional. Very rare.

“It wasn’t just about sex and passion or erotica, although it was about those things too. It was about tenderness and emotion and release and it had a huge, symbolic meaning in the film.”

Before the movie began, Weisz and McAdams remained distant, never feeling the need to hang out to together to establish a bond.

“We didn’t [meet outside of the set] and we didn’t really want to,” says Weisz, who is married to Daniel Craig and pregnant with their child. She also has a son by director Darren Aronofsky.

“We met before we filmed and talked through things with [director] Sebastián [Lelio] but we didn’t go off on our own and do [any] method acting.

“I don’t think either of us works in that way. Chemistry is something that either happens or it doesn’t. I like to think it did.”

For Weisz, it was important that gay audiences responded to the love story at the center of the film.

“I’ve spoken to…lesbians…and they’ve mostly been very — I don’t want to say grateful but — happy and validated at being represente­d [onscreen],” says the actress. “They felt, for instance, that the sex scene was really good and right and moving. Gay women I’ve spoken to thus far have all really loved the movie.”

As one of the film’s producers, Weisz was partly responsibl­e for enlisting Lelio to direct. The Chilean helmer, who scored raves for his movie “Gloria,” recently won the Best Foreign Language Oscar for “A Fantastic Woman.”

“Sebastian…really connected with the universali­ty in the story, which transcende­d its Judaism or its Britishnes­s or anything.

“I didn’t know what he was going to bring to it. I just knew that, having seen “Gloria” and “A Fantastic Woman,” that he puts people who are normally in the margins of storytelli­ng front and center.

“This would be true of these two women. They’re not mainstream movie fare. I just trusted him to go on this voyage… I knew that he was passionate and unsentimen­tal and empathic and glorious.”

 ?? BLEECKER STREET VIA AP ?? This image released by Bleecker Street shows Rachel McAdams and Rachel Weisz, right, in a scene from “Disobedien­ce.”
BLEECKER STREET VIA AP This image released by Bleecker Street shows Rachel McAdams and Rachel Weisz, right, in a scene from “Disobedien­ce.”

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