The New Zealand Herald

A mother of her invention

- Lindsey Bahr

Director Julia Hart couldn’t stop thinking about Tuesday Weld. She had just watched Michael Mann’s 1981 thriller Thief and Weld’s character Jessie had taken over her imaginatio­n. Where did she and the baby go? What was going through her mind?

In some ways, Jessie is just the girlfriend. She’s there to up the stakes for the main character and exits the frame when the action begins. It’s not uncommon in the genre. Think of Michael Corleone closing the door on Kay at the end of The Godfather.

But, Hart thought, what if we followed the woman instead of the man? It wouldn’t be revisionis­t or corrective, just a different path. And it was the beginning of the years-long process of creating I’m Your Woman, which turns the lens on the housewife who has to go on the run with a baby when her criminal husband disappears. The film, starring Rachel Brosnahan, will be available on Amazon Prime on December 11.

“It’s not like I want Thief to have followed Jessie,” Hart said.

“The movie was so good that I couldn’t stop thinking about this character and the story of all these women. In these crime dramas, even though the women weren’t the main characters, they were amazing characters.

“They were complex and flawed and interestin­g and well performed and well written. They just didn’t get their own movie . . . ”

Hart and her husband, producer Jordan Horowitz, got to work writing the script. And when Amazon Studio heads, who had been impressed with her superhero drama Fast Color, asked what they wanted to make next, they had this ready to go.

After meeting Brosnahan, she knew she’d found her Jean.

“She’s such a chameleon,” Hart said. “She feels like a real woman. I think a lot of the women in the 70s movies did as well — not like someone who had been airbrushed and made to look perfect.”

Despite her successes over the past few years, Brosnahan had been frustrated by the “one-dimensiona­l” roles that were coming her way. Jean

was a refreshing departure from that.

“Jean is a quiet woman’s action hero. That’s something that I’ve never seen before,” Brosnahan said.

“And it’s a really non-traditiona­l look at motherhood. Motherhood is more often than not, not the pictureper­fect journey we see on Instagram.”

Hart knew she’d have her work cut out for herself directing her first car chase and big club scene with hundreds of background actors.

But the biggest challenge would be the fact they’d decided to work with real babies, who in the process of the chronologi­cal shoot would go from 6 to 8 months in age.

“I am constantly frustrated by how people treat babies like they’re not people both in real life and on film — like it’s fine to have a fake baby or it’s fine to have four different babies playing the same character,” Hart said.

“We knew it was a big risk, but we felt like it was one worth taking.”

Brosnahan also took on a different kind of role in I’m Your Woman: as producer. She’d been thinking about it for some time, “looking for a way to carve out a path for myself.”

And she’s immensely grateful to Hart and Horowitz for giving her the opportunit­y.

“This is such a literal example, but most of the time you show up on the set as an actor having never seen what could be your house, the character’s house that they have lived in 30 years. And you’re showing up on day one and trying to pretend you’ve lived there for 30 years,” she said.

As a producer, she was involved in everything from script developmen­t to location scouting. When she showed up to her character’s house this time, she knew it already.

“It made me a better actor,” she said.

Hart has spent most of her career as a writer and filmmaker trying to convince studios that stories about women are worth telling. After years of fighting, she’s finally starting to see the change.

“The studios are starting to really take female filmmakers and filmmakers of colour more seriously. It’s not just lip service anymore.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Rachel Brosnahan in a scene from the film I’m Your Woman.
Photo / AP Rachel Brosnahan in a scene from the film I’m Your Woman.

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