Times Colonist

Ellen Page hitting stride with three new movies

Canadian actor and producer has married her personal life and beliefs with her work

- JEN YAMATO

Half a lifetime ago, Ellen Page figured she had options if the acting thing didn’t go anywhere. “When I was a teenager, I thought: ‘What if it doesn’t work out?’ I thought I was going to be a cinematogr­apher,” said Page, whose career rocketed after her turn as a pregnant teenager in 2007’s Juno. “I was also obsessed with movie trailers. I was like: ‘I’ll make movie trailers.’ ”

Juno earned her an Oscar nomination at 20. A decade later, Page is busier than ever.

This week, she stars in the slick studio remake of the 1990 thriller Flatliners, about a group of medical students toying with the boundary between life and death.

This month, she premièred two movies at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival: the Irish zombie thriller The Cured and the romantic drama My Days of Mercy, about two women on opposite sides of the death-penalty debate who fall in love.

Sipping green tea on a brisk Toronto day, Page remarked on how nice it was to be back in the city where she moved from Halifax to study at age 16.

“There were way fewer condos then,” Page said with a laugh. “It was fun. It was back before smartphone­s. I was just this kid in ripped Converse, romping around the city.”

Softly spoken, gracious and direct, she reflected on the course life has charted since those days, cracking the occasional mischievou­s smile.

“I’m getting old,” joked Page, one of the rare faces in Hollywood that never seems to age. “It’s interestin­g to look back. If I was to re-watch something like Hard Candy now, I’d be like: ‘Look at all this feminist conversati­on.’ At the time, I was just 17.”

Hard Candy, the 2005 thriller directed by David Slade starring Page as a Red Riding Hood-esque teenager turning the tables on a sexual predator, marked the first time audiences had an inkling that a deeper, darker maturity lived within her five-foot-one frame.

Roles in big films and acclaimed indies followed as Page’s star rose. But something crucial was lacking in her career, despite successes such as Juno, Whip It and Inception.

“In that time and the years following, I wasn’t necessaril­y that connected publicly to who I was,” said Page, who came out as gay in 2014. Being able to live authentica­lly in her public life, she said, unmistakab­ly affected the roles and projects she took on in her profession­al life.

“I think the biggest difference is feeling more able to be present in this, more able to enjoy, to feel at ease,” she said.

“Exploring how that changes how you work, how it can deepen the work. I think now I do feel a little more solid, and more able to be present in this.”

Travelling the world for her Emmy-nominated Viceland documentar­y series Gaycation also deepened the connection between her personal life and profession­al work.

“Meeting some of the most marginaliz­ed people you could meet and in different spaces all around the world, they’re sort of all dealing with the same things,” she said, emphasizin­g the struggles faced by members of the LGBTQ communitie­s.

“Dealing with significan­t trauma and fear, just by walking down the street, especially postTrump, with hate crimes on the rise. Of course, there’s a devastatio­n to it — and then you couldn’t feel more inspired because you meet the most resilient people you could ever meet,” she said. “People who just want a chance, and to be able to have a dream and access it, and to live their life.”

While she was filming Gaycation in India, the script for The Cured landed on her radar. Page was intrigued by the intensely emotional family drama in the guise of an apocalypti­c zombie flick. She took on the role of Abbie, a journalist and mother to a young son wrestling with grief and forgivenes­s in a gritty contempora­ry Ireland where people rehabilita­ted after an outbreak of violent psychosis are reintroduc­ed to society as pariahs.

“It moved me. It provoked thought and conversati­on,” Page said of the David Freyne-directed film.

The Cured was filmed just after the presidenti­al election last fall, and real world anxieties became unintentio­nally prescient in the movie’s apocalypti­c realism.

“It involves populist politics and fear-mongering, people utilizing that fear for their own advantage, militarize­d police, lots of things that are going on,” said Page. “But to me, when you read a script — whether it’s genre or whether it’s two people in a house — and it’s good, and whole, and feels honest, it typically always has parallels to what’s going on and to current issues.”

Telling a wide range of LGBTQ stories is of particular priority to Page, who stars in and produced the romantic drama My Days of Mercy. In it, she plays a withdrawn anti-death penalty activist who enters a star-crossed romance with a woman on the other side of the political debate.

“We wanted to do a love story,” said Page, who stars and produces with friend Kate Mara. “Blue Is the Warmest Colour had just come out, and we both adored it. I just want to play queer characters, to have those storylines and try and have a wider array of what those films can be.”

“We wanted to work together, because we love each other and we have a mutual respect for each other’s work,” Mara said.

Producing the film themselves was a necessity. The pair noted that, even for top-tier female actors, finding a project with a strong female lead role, let alone two, is still rare in Hollywood.

“It is very rare to find a film that stars three women, you have a female director and female producers,” said Mara, who, with Page, brought Christine Vachon of Killer Films onboard, tapped Tali Shalom Ezer to direct the screenplay by Joe Barton and recruited actor-director Amy Seimetz to play a crucial supporting role as Page’s sister.

“You get sent scripts all the time where the female character is not affecting the plot in any sort of shape or form; they’re just there to service a male narrative,” Seimetz said. “So it’s really lovely to get a script where you get a cool part or an interestin­g character, but it’s also all women and women are driving the story forward.”

As wildly divergent as Page’s two latest indies are, both The Cured and My Days of Mercy have a common thread in her sensitive portrayals, characters processing grief, trauma and loss, fighting to reclaim their optimism in the face of the bleak worlds they live in. Perhaps surprising­ly, Page sees her Flatliners character as occupying a similar emotional space.

“She’s had some trauma in her life, which I don’t think is a shock for a Flatliners movie,” said Page, who plays the ringleader of a group of medical students experiment­ing with death in pursuit of answers beyond science.

“I focused on this person being incredibly traumatize­d and pretty disassocia­ted. She’s kind of manipulati­ve. I liked exploring what it would mean to convince people to do this and what would it take.”

Page considered what unites her three most recent screen characters: sadness.

“To me, that’s one of the things that connects us the most as people,” she said. “Profound sadness, or profound joy, in terms of watching art.”

 ??  ?? Ellen Page in a scene from Flatliners, which opens today. The film is a remake of the 1990 thriller of the same name.
Ellen Page in a scene from Flatliners, which opens today. The film is a remake of the 1990 thriller of the same name.

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