USA TODAY US Edition

Nicole Kidman makes a ‘Killing’

Dark comedy ‘Sacred Deer’ is her weirdest yet

- Patrick Ryan

Nothing could have prepared Nicole Kidman for The Killing of a Sacred Deer.

The actress, who won an Emmy Award in September for HBO’s Big Lit

tle Lies, blindly signed on to work with Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos after watching his peculiar dystopian romance The Lobster. When she read the script, she discovered an even stranger story than that black comedy, in which people are turned into animals if they can’t find soulmates.

In Sacred Deer (now showing in 34 cities; expands Friday; nationwide Nov. 10), Kidman plays Anna, the austere wife of a brilliant surgeon, Steven (Colin Farrell), who is accused of killing a menacing teen’s father on his operating table. Struck by a curse, Steven and Anna must choose which of their family to sacrifice to right that wrong.

Lanthimos finds unsettling humor in the clan’s stilted interactio­ns.

“I was like, ‘Yorgos, I have no idea how to play this as a comedy,’ ” says Kidman, laughing. She turned to Far- rell, who worked with Lanthimos on The

Lobster and assured her, “This will be like nothing you’ve ever experience­d.”

The film — a riff on the Greek myth of Iphigenia, who is threatened with sacrifice after her father kills a sacred deer — is meant to make audiences “uncomforta­ble, but also kind of entertaine­d,” Lanthimos says.

Sacred Deer is one of four wildly different projects Kidman, 50, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, along with this summer’s The Beguiled, fall miniseries Top of the Lake: China Girl and upcoming sci-fi romance How to

Talk to Girls at Parties. Beginning with her Oscar nomination for last year’s

Lion, the actress is in the midst of an Internet-bestowed “Kidmanaiss­ance,” which she chalks up to coincidenc­e.

Work “ebbs and flows,” Kidman says. “Is it lovely for it to collide with turning 50? Yes, and to be able to have Big Little

Lies embraced like it was — particular­ly at this time for women — speaks loudly to the community.”

In the miniseries, Kidman played a well-to-do housewife and victim of domestic abuse, which she called a “complicate­d, insidious disease” in her Emmys acceptance speech. But she’s wary of discussing the flood of sexual assault allegation­s against Harvey Weinstein, who produced Kidman films such as Li

on, The Others and Cold Mountain.

“I’ve made my statement, and I’m reluctant to get into this now because that would be a whole other (topic),” she says.

Next up, Kidman will appear in superhero movie Aquaman and gayconvers­ion drama Boy Erased. Although it hasn’t been officially announced, she teases that a second season of Big Little

Lies is “moving forward at a rapid rate,” and hopes it will start production early next year.

“Because of the responses of audiences and critics, it was like, ‘ Gosh, we really should explore these women further,’ ” Kidman says. “It seemed sad to abandon them when they’ve only just gotten started.”

 ??  ?? “I would go in every day going, ‘I wonder how we’re going to ... make this work,’ ” Kidman says of shooting Sacred Deer.
“I would go in every day going, ‘I wonder how we’re going to ... make this work,’ ” Kidman says of shooting Sacred Deer.
 ??  ?? Anna (Nicole Kidman) and Steven (Colin Farell) are forced to pick favorites when their family is cursed. PHOTOS BY JIMA/A24
Anna (Nicole Kidman) and Steven (Colin Farell) are forced to pick favorites when their family is cursed. PHOTOS BY JIMA/A24

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