Los Angeles Times

A SISTERHOOD OF INTEGRITY

The young stars of the sci-fi thriller ‘Annihilati­on’ built a like-minded rapport

- BY JEN YAMATO

>>> Onscreen in the sci-fi odyssey “Annihilati­on,” an expedition ventures deep into a foreboding terrain known only as Area X, carrying guns and harboring mounting suspicions about one another. ¶ These soldiers — a psychologi­st (Jennifer Jason Leigh), a biologist (Natalie Portman), a paramedic (Gina Rodriguez), a physicist (Tessa Thompson) and an anthropolo­gist (Tuva Novotny) — enter what is about to become a living, breathing nightmare, an environmen­tal disaster zone without scientific explanatio­n, as filtered through the mind of “Ex Machina” director Alex Garland, adapting the first book in Jeff Vander Meer’s “Southern Reach” trilogy. ¶ That they’re all complex and dimensiona­l female characters is at once trailblazi­ng and, refreshing­ly, perfectly normalized. ¶ “Each of the women have their own destructiv­e behavior,” said Portman, who brings steely intensity to the role of Lena, the biologist with her own reasons for volunteeri­ng for the dangerous mission, in Friday’s release. “I find that so beautiful. That’s the greatest science fiction, when the psychologi­cal becomes externaliz­ed. ¶ “And to have five women at the center of this expedition — we’re so used to seeing five men going and doing something together, it’s not even questioned why it’s always all men. To give that same kind of attitude to five women is really unique.” ¶ The sisterhood struck on the

[‘Annihilati­on,’ London set of “Annihilati­on” is strong among Portman, Rodriguez and Thompson, reunited in a suite at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel ahead of the film’s Los Angeles world premiere.

Sitting side by side on a couch with their legs curled up, the camaraderi­e came flooding back in waves of laughter and mutual admiration.

“I feel like [‘Annihilati­on’] is the kind of movie where if you’ve seen it only once you haven’t seen it,” said Thompson. “One of Alex’s references for this film was [Andrei Tarkovsky’s] ‘Stalker,’ which I watched a couple times in anticipati­on of making this movie, trying to figure out what that film is, and means. It felt like being inside of a meditation.”

“Ooooh!” gasped Rodriguez. “That’s poetic. It’s like being inside of a meditation.”

“But you know what I mean? It’s a very meditative, lyrical film, and we don’t have a lot of practice as audience members with that kind of content, particular­ly in American film,” Thompson continued.

“I feel like we reject it quickly too, the way they did with Darren Aronofsky’s ‘mother!,’ which I loved,” added Rodriguez, gesticulat­ing to the sky. “I thought it was Jennifer [Lawrence]’s best performanc­e. It made me think for hours. Art that moves you in any which way, whether it’s positively or negatively — it’s working.”

Part philosophi­cal sci-fi, part psychedeli­c-existentia­l fever dream, “Annihilati­on” pulses with the looming unease of the unknown. That unknown lurks in the darkness of the vast swamplands and marshes of the Southern Reach, marked by the beauty and horrors of nature run amok, and perhaps more disturbing­ly in the disquiet of confrontin­g those same mysteries within oneself.

Self-destructio­n is in our DNA, the film posits. Its approach, however, is one of empathy. And the journeys the three stars went on in search of their characters, expanded in collaborat­ion with Garland from the sparsely detailed counterpar­ts in VanderMeer’s book, had profound and lasting effects.

Portman, who moved her family near the Pinewood Studios production during filming, responded to the melancholi­c interrogat­ion Lena embarks on as she pushes farther into Area X while reflecting on a broken marriage (Oscar Isaac, reuniting with “Ex Machina” helmer Garland, plays her husband).

“Alex brought the [idea of] selfdestru­ctive behavior and defining the destructio­n of a marriage as part of that,” she said. “You could call it moralistic, but I found it very moving — that it is destructiv­e, hurting someone that you love very deeply.”

The physicalit­y of the shoot demanded Portman know her way around a military-issue machine gun and train with visionary dancer Bobbi Jene, whom Garland hired on Isaac’s recommenda­tion to choreograp­h a memorable third-act sequence of movement.

“She would give me directions like, ‘Feel like you’re like an octopus stuck to the wall,’ ” raved Portman. “I wish someone was always giving me that kind of physical imagery. It was really cool.”

Thompson found a deep connection to her character Josie’s growing link with the mutations the group encounters as they get closer to the inexplicab­le veil of energy known as “The Shimmer.”

“There was something in it that I was really struck by in the destructio­n of the Earth, of how we treat the other things that are not human — the planet,” she said. “At a certain point with the destructio­n that we do, we will not have the technology to undo it or to even understand it.”

Rodriguez’s character, Anya, a paramedic with a physical swagger, has an outgoing personalit­y that masks her own addictive personalit­y and deep-seated fears — a theme that resonates in Rodriguez’s own life.

“I didn’t realize how much of my personal draw to the character was her reason for going into the Shimmer,” she admitted. “Her reason for going on a suicide mission was running away from her past and her addictive personalit­y, her addictions, and her fear of mental illness, and her fear of losing control of herself.

“I’m always battling the idea of mental health. My fear of it personally, the history of mental health in my family, and not ever really facing it because in my culture we don’t really talk about mental health. I got to actually enter my own fear as an actor.”

No ‘Jane’ here

Also tantalizin­g for Rodriguez was the chance to step outside her popular “Jane the Virgin” TV alter ego. “Being able to play this very outwardly unafraid badass … was so dope,” she said. “As an artist you want to transform, you want to be anything, you want to be able to be capable of doing anything, and I felt like Alex was telling me I could.”

There was one caveat: She had to shave her head for the role just three days after wrapping on “Jane the Virgin.” “It was very fun to do and also really awful and scary,” she said with a laugh. “It felt like night and day. They cut all my hair off and I was like, ‘Who am I?’ And then Alex was like, ‘Let’s go on a journey of wondering who we are!’ Oh, man, it was crazy.”

“She had beautiful long hair,” Portman said, smiling at Rodriguez. “She was hair commercial perfect. I shaved my head for ‘V for Vendetta,’ and I loved it. The first time you feel rain or a shower on your bare head, it’s so magical. You looked so awesome with it! But it was very brave.”

“I was very lucky I had them saying that the whole time,” Rodriguez said with a grin, pointing to her cast mates, “because I needed to hear it.”

Thompson smiled slyly. “And a huge contingent of the internet were convinced that she and I were lovers in the movie.”

It was almost two years ago that the cast of “Annihilati­on” assembled in London to shoot the ambitious and heady film. Their lushly immersive sets commandeer­ed one corner of the historic Pinewood Studios as another sci-fi flick, “Star Wars: The Last Jedi,” shot on neighborin­g stages.

The material was physically and mentally demanding, and Garland’s decision to film chronologi­cally meant that the longer production went on, the more exhausting it became.

When it came time to shoot one of the film’s most harrowing scenes, the feeling on set was palpable. With three of the cast tied to chairs inside a dimly lighted abandoned house and Garland himself operating a massive animatroni­c bear head menacing his stars, the scene felt real.

“In that moment it was about truly facing our mortality, and because we shot the film in sequence, by then we were tired and had lived in this for a little bit,” said Thompson. “By then we really had this bond.”

Time for Time’s Up

The trio found themselves linking up again after “Annihilati­on” with a very different goal: Combating sexual harassment across industries, including their own, as founding signatorie­s of the Time’s Up movement this year.

“I feel like it’s a continuati­on of the sisterhood we started on this movie,” Portman said of her friendship with Thompson and Rodriguez. “It was really awesome to get to experience each other in a new light; as colleagues, and then friends, and then fellow activists.”

Thompson has been heartened to see Time’s Up take hold in the culture and by the importance her peers have placed on intersecti­onal activism.

“Any measure of success that Time’s Up specifical­ly has had has to be connected to what’s outside of our industry,” she said. “It began with a call to arms from the Farm Workers’ Alliance, from the women who literally put food on our table, to say, ‘We stand with you because we understand what we’re going through, and it happens in our industry.’ So it’s bigger than us.

“Having worked in the industry for as long as I have and particular­ly as a young woman of color, it’s hard to gain access — even when you gain a measure of a platform to really get your voices heard. It’s important to have sisters to make sure your voice is as vital.”

Both Thompson and Rodriguez cheered Portman’s Golden Globes moment this year when, presenting the director category during the live telecast, she went off script to point out the absence of any female directing nominees

“I’ve got a video of it, girl!” said Rodriguez.

But Portman downplayed her onstage gesture as just one of the many ways the hundreds of members of the Time’s Up movement are trying to effect change: “If you look around the room and everyone looks like you, there’s a problem, and not only should it feel weird but you need to do something about it.

“I think a lot of us have had our eyes opened. I speak for myself; I haven’t always had my eyes open. And it’s an amazing, energizing, incredible feeling to be awakened to this, even though it’s a lot of ugly truths to try to change — to change myself first and try to be part of this cultural shift.”

All three women have used their successes to advocate for various causes important to them. But Time’s Up has given many of Hollywood’s artists a focus to pool their platforms with Voltron-esque force.

Rodriguez has for years pushed for greater Latino representa­tion in entertainm­ent. “What you end up realizing is that things don’t get done alone,” she said. “To know that I finally have somewhere to funnel my energy with the power and the strength of these ladies … you just don’t feel alone anymore.”

After the female-led “Annihilati­on,” Portman, Rodriguez and Thompson hope more films will follow suit as Hollywood sees long overdue change in the way stories are told.

One vital next step, Rodriguez notes, will be getting more underrepre­sented voices hired behind the camera and more diverse projects backed in a Hollywood that remains risk-averse when it comes to making inclusive choices.

“In so many of these meetings I feel like I’m trying to sell a story about oranges to people who have never had oranges before,” said Rodriguez, notes of hope and frustratio­n in her voice. “They know it’s profitable-ish, but they’re afraid of it because they don’t understand it.

“It’s exciting and discouragi­ng at the same time. I celebrate the fact that I’m in that room. Hopefully at one point it’s going to work — and I’m going to be able to get even more people in the room.”

‘It was really awesome to get to experience each other in a new light; as colleagues, and then friends, and then fellow activists.’ — NATALIE PORTMAN

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? GINA RODRIGUEZ, left, Tessa Thompson and Natalie Portman renewed the on-set camaraderi­e of 2016 as founding signatorie­s of the Time’s Up movement.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times GINA RODRIGUEZ, left, Tessa Thompson and Natalie Portman renewed the on-set camaraderi­e of 2016 as founding signatorie­s of the Time’s Up movement.
 ?? Photograph­s by Peter Mountain ?? IN “ANNIHILATI­ON,” Natalie Portman, left, plays a biologist and Tessa Thompson a physicist who are investigat­ing a mysterious environmen­tal disaster zone.
Photograph­s by Peter Mountain IN “ANNIHILATI­ON,” Natalie Portman, left, plays a biologist and Tessa Thompson a physicist who are investigat­ing a mysterious environmen­tal disaster zone.
 ??  ?? GINA RODRIGUEZ, right, and Thompson star in the sci-fi film set for release on Friday.
GINA RODRIGUEZ, right, and Thompson star in the sci-fi film set for release on Friday.

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