USA TODAY US Edition

Natalie Dormer branches out in ‘The Forest’

She plays very different sisters in the mindbendin­g new thriller

- Brian Truitt @briantruit­t USA TODAY

Natalie Dormer saw double when she ventured into The Forest.

A supporting player in period and fantasy TV series such as The

Tudors and Game of Thrones as well as the last two Hunger

Games movies, the British actress makes her horror debut as twin sisters Sara and Jess Price.

The Forest (in theaters Friday) is set in Japan’s Aokigahara Forest, which is infamous in real life for its otherworld­ly presence and popularity as a last stop for suicidal people. Sara learns that her sibling has vanished in the locale, and fearing the worst, she hops on a plane from America to Asia to find Jess.

This is a scary movie, after all, so Sara encounters a mysterious dude (Taylor Kinney) all too keen to help her, Japanese schoolgirl­s popping up with vague warnings, and lots of strange happenings in the vegetation.

“Anyone can imagine getting a phone call that someone they love is in trouble and against all reason and all better judgment and all the warnings of the locals, you go to this alien world,” says Dormer, 33. “You do something kind of crazy just out of love and loyalty (for those) you care deeply about.”

The Forest has a strong psychologi­cal thriller bent, so much of the movie shows Sara unraveling into madness and questionin­g the reality of the terrors around her. But another attraction for Dormer was getting to play two very different people at the same time. “Jess is the free-spirited one who goes off and does whatever she wants,” says director Jason Zada. “Sara was the more stable one who got a husband and a house in the suburbs.”

Putting the characters together proved technicall­y tricky in a key early scene where, through dialogue, moviegoers see how opposite they are.

“That’s like a life tick box as an actor, to be playing against yourself. It’s certainly surreal,” Dormer says, laughing. “(But) it’s hard to make choices as Sara when you don’t quite know how you’re going to play it as Jess yet. You haven’t got the other actor to react against. You have to be a bit schizophre­nic.”

Filming in Aokigahara isn’t permitted because of its reputation as a “suicide forest” — Zada found similar surroundin­gs in Serbia for his production — but he did visit the site at the northwest base of Mount Fuji.

Two guides bailed on him days before taking Zada into the forest; one was spooked by bad dreams, and another was forbidden to go after his mother had nightmares. When Zada finally found someone to lead him, the director veered from the designated path and felt that “there’s something there and it’s freaky.”

Dormer also made her own pilgrimage but determined the forest was more spiritual than scary.

“The lens with which we look at a place is informed by our knowledge of it,” the actress says. “You have a different sensation when you walk into Aokigahara because you’re compassion­ate and sad. You appreciate that people go there without the intention of coming out.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY JAMES DITTIGER, GRAMERCY PICTURES ?? Sara Price (Natalie Dormer) ventures into a mysterious Japanese “suicide” forest to find her vanished sister.
PHOTOS BY JAMES DITTIGER, GRAMERCY PICTURES Sara Price (Natalie Dormer) ventures into a mysterious Japanese “suicide” forest to find her vanished sister.
 ??  ?? Dormer stars as Sara Price and her twin, Jess.
Dormer stars as Sara Price and her twin, Jess.

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