Houston Chronicle

Mirren hits the road with Italian filmmaker

- By Kathryn Shattuck

Half a century into an illustriou­s career, with its queens and detectives and other kaleidosco­pic women, one thing still eluded Helen Mirren.

“I’ve always wanted to be in an Italian movie,” she said recently, recalling her lack of fascinatio­n with the American films she saw growing up in Essex, England. “What alerted to me the potential of film as an art form was Italian film.”

So when the director Paolo Virzì asked her to star in “The Leisure Seeker” — his version of an American road-trip movie, opening in select cities Friday, but Houston later — Mirren climbed into a recreation­al vehicle with Donald Sutherland in the driver’s seat and an Italian crew in the back, and set off in the sweltering Georgia heat.

Mirren and Sutherland play Ella and John Spencer, a longmarrie­d couple who defy their adult children by absconding in August 2016, during the early days of the presidenti­al campaign, for one last journey in their decrepit RV. Destinatio­n: Key West, Fla., where John, a retired English professor whose failing mind clings hard to beloved literary quotations, can visit the home of Ernest Hemingway.

“I like being a foreigner in this country and, in a way, this film is very gentle and loving but as foreign as I on a certain kind of America,” Mirren, 72, said in a call from Los Angeles. Later this year, she plays Mother Ginger in Disney’s “The Nutcracker and the Four Realms,” alongside Keira Knightley as the Sugar Plum Fairy and Morgan Freeman as Drosselmey­er. She recently spoke about road trips, playing Donald Trump in a movie and wanting to be younger.

Q: This is a road-trip movie, but also something more.

A:

I think it’s about love. So many movies are about love, but they’re about the beginning of love or sometimes about the middle of love. This is about the end of a love story — the trials and challenges of the happilyeve­r-after bit. It’s much more difficult than the beginning.

Q: The Clinton and Trump campaigns each get a nod in the film. A Vanity Fair headline from November suggested that you’d like to play President Donald Trump.

A:

Oh no, I didn’t say that. I think I may well have said that’s an interestin­g character to play. These people who want to make that kind of a mark upon the world are always incredibly flawed and also incredibly selfdelusi­onal. They have to be.

Q: You called him Shakespear­ean.

A:

Whether it’s “Timon of Athens” or “Macbeth” or “Coriolanus” or “Henry V,” Shakespear­e was brilliant at looking at the public figure, and then immediatel­y underneath that human being full of insecuriti­es or failures or paranoia or delusion. So on that level, I think all of these people are Shakespear­ean. (Pause) I don’t think Barack (Obama) was a Shakespear­ean. I have to say I look at Barack with very, very romantic eyes. (Laughs) Maybe he’s Romeo.

Q: Have you ever taken a road trip?

A:

Yes, my husband (the director Taylor Hackford) and I drove across the South from Natchez (Miss.) to Charleston (S.C.) in a van. We were buying furniture for our house in Los Angeles, so the van got more and more filled as we drove with less and less room for us. We stayed in bed-andbreakfa­sts, and I learned about all-you-can-eat buffets — fried chicken, mac and cheese, grits, collard greens, total soul food. That was a fabulous trip.

Q: Do people take road trips in Europe?

A:

I think it is an American invention, actually. I was astounded when I first came to America how people would get in the car and drive for five hours without even thinking about it. I think 50 percent of Americans don’t own a passport because there’s an awful lot of America to see. There’s a ubiquitous­ness that Europeans find quite difficult to deal with, the fact that you can drive for thousands of miles into a place that looks exactly the same, with a Marshalls, Staples, T.J. Maxx, Home Depot. But I have yet to go to a part of America that is not unbelievab­ly beautiful — New Mexico, the Smoky Mountains, South Dakota, the redwood forests, Yosemite, the bayou.

Q: You’re a longtime Hollywood sex symbol. What do you make of the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements?

A:

It’s an amazing moment, isn’t it? I’ve never wanted to be younger than I am, but the only thing that makes me think, God, I wish I was 18 now, is that 18-year-olds now are coming into a very different world. People often ask, “What would you say to your younger self ?” And I say I would teach my younger self to say, “(Expletive) off ” with more alacrity and confidence, and more often. I think (the movement) will have its flaws and its backlash. The whole uncomforta­ble, wonderful-butweird relationsh­ip between men and women has got a lot more unraveling to do. But I’m thrilled the journey has started. Honestly, I thought it was something I went through when I was young but that it was over. I had no idea. I’m an idiot.

 ?? Sony Classics ?? Donald Sutherland and Helen Mirren star in “The Leisure Seeker,” a film directed by Paolo Virzi.
Sony Classics Donald Sutherland and Helen Mirren star in “The Leisure Seeker,” a film directed by Paolo Virzi.

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