Los Angeles Times

Mothers are superheroe­s

‘Fast Color’ depicts a new kind of hero: a mom of color with creative superpower­s.

- By Jen Yamato

In the post-“Black Panther” era of inclusion and representa­tion for all, the superhero we need and deserve is a woman.

Her name is Ruth, and in filmmaker Julia Hart’s “Fast Color,” she traverses a dreary pre-apocalypti­c American landscape, running from the uncharted magnitude of her unique gifts and from the powersthat-be who seek to stifle them.

She is a mother. She is a daughter. She is a woman of color. And in Hart’s vision of female power, world-premiering Saturday at the South by Southwest Film Festival, she is the future.

“‘Fast Color’ came out of this idea of moms as superheroe­s,” explained Hart, on a sunny Los Angeles afternoon ahead of her SXSW premiere. “I’d never seen a mom who was literally a superhero in a movie before.”

Gugu Mbatha-Raw stars opposite Lorraine Tous-

saint, Christophe­r Denham, David Strathairn and Saniyya Sidney, breathing quiet emotional life into the broken Ruth, who finds herself pulled toward home as the drought-ridden world around her slowly dies.

Like Hart’s 2016 directoria­l debut “Miss Stevens,” an indie charmer inspired by her tenure as a young high school teacher, the roots of “Fast Color” grew from personal experience — and a frustratio­n with the ways the same characters and stories kept being told within the superhero genre.

“Male superheroe­s are by and large, prior to movies like ‘Black Panther,’ about white men destroying things in order to save them — which is so… men , to do it that way,” smiled Hart, who co-wrote the multi-generation­al tale with her husband, Oscar-nominated “La La Land” producer Jordan Horowitz.

Instead of wielding innately destructiv­e powers, Ruth’s gifts — manifested in stunning bursts of mesmerizin­g visuals in the purposeful­ly ordinary world of “Fast Color” — are forceful and yet uniquely feminine in nature.

“What would the female power be? It would be creation,” explained Hart, who directed “Fast Color” over a 28-day shoot in New Mexico, capturing the state’s stunning magic hour vistas with cinematogr­apher Michael Fimognari. “So what could a superpower be that could lead to creating something, instead of destroying something in order to save it?”

Hart, 35, and Horowitz, 37, collaborat­ed previously as co-writers on “Miss Stevens,” which he also produced — and on Arthur, their three-year-old son, who gambols across the cobalt blue carpet of their Westside home helpfully assisting mom and dad as they have portraits taken ahead of their trip to SXSW.

Their second child is on the way, due to arrive later this year before Hart directs her third film, an adaptation of the young adult novel “Stargirl,” for Disney’s new streaming service.

Moviemakin­g mom

As Hart discusses “Fast Color” and her own fastmoving career, her hands caress her belly and the subject of motherhood often comes up as a source of power and inspiratio­n.

“I didn’t decide to even be a director until I became a mom,” said Hart, who was working as a high school teacher when she wrote her first screenplay, the femaledriv­en Civil War thriller “The Keeping Room.” Her script landed on the Black List and landed her an agent, and was turned into a film starring Brit Marling. Watching it get made after becoming pregnant with her first child, Hart realized she wanted to direct.

“I always thought I would be a writer, but in spite of feeling like I was a confident, strong feminist, I was afraid to take that leap until I took that leap into writing,” she explained. “I don’t quite know what the connection is, but becoming a mom was the most powerful I’d ever felt — so I felt empowered to take on the role of director.”

“I thought, ‘I have the power in me to bring my stories to fruition – I don’t need someone else to do it for me.’

Hart and Horowitz, both theater-loving New Yorkers, first met in their early 20s through mutual friends. Love came first, then a move to Los Angeles, and eventually, their entwined careers in show business.

“We definitely started then what is now our life together, making movies and watching movies and having children.”

After making “The Keeping Room” and “Miss Stevens” together, the couple were writing “Fast Color” for Hart to direct when they caught Gina Prince-Bythewood’s “Beyond the Lights” — and were blown away by Mbatha-Raw’s breakout starring turn. The British actress immediatel­y became their first choice to star as Ruth.

“We watched it and were like, ‘Holy… who is that?’ That performanc­e going unrecogniz­ed is a travesty,” said Hart. “I have goosebumps just thinking about it. Who Gugu is as a person is so separate from who she is onscreen. She’s such a chameleon.”

Mbatha-Raw read the script and found herself drawn to Ruth’s “woman on the run” journey. “As I got deeper into the story, I realized that she was on the run from herself, and that’s when it really got interestin­g for me,” she said via email.

“I found it refreshing that unlike other superhero worlds we're used to seeing, this landscape felt very grounded — there were no capes or spandex... it is about the power that we all have as women inside of ourselves if we only have the courage to release our own fear and embrace it .”

Genuine Inclusivit­y

She signed on to star for Hart, and suddenly “Fast Color” took on greater layers as Ruth — who was not written to a specific ethnicity — became multiracia­l in the casting. Toussaint (“Orange Is the New Black”) came onboard to play her mother Bo, and Sidney (“Fences”), who was 10 years old at the time of filming, was cast as her daughter, Lila.

“In casting Gugu, what started out as a movie about female empowermen­t became about the empowermen­t of women of color,” said Hart. While her ethnicity is ingrained in the story, it is not the story, making “Fast Color” — like Disney’s “A Wrinkle in Time,” which also features Mbatha-Raw — an example of the kind of normalized, effortless representa­tion Hollywood can move toward.

“Representa­tion matters, and in order to be a part of that movement and making sure that there aren’t just stories about white men and white women, you don’t have to sit down and conceive of a story about race specifical­ly,” said Hart.

“You just have to have an imaginatio­n in your casting. Because it was, ‘Oh, my god, this is the most talented actress of her generation and she would be so amazing in this part’ — and the world expanded from there.”

At a time of high awareness in the entertainm­ent industry around inclusion and representa­tion, both Hart and Horowitz are supporters of the Time’s Up movement and have used their platforms, particular­ly on social media, to be advocates for elevating underrepre­sented voices. That imperative extends to their creative work too, says Hart.

“We want to be a part of telling more stories and making sure that every little girl and every little boy gets to walk into a movie theater gets to see themselves and has a story about themselves,” she said. “‘Fast Color’ became this thing that was bigger than us, and bigger than the movie. I feel so lucky that I get to be a part of telling more representa­tive stories, because I think it’s the future.”

They are among a generation of emerging artists who are making Hollywood feel increasing­ly communal, not competitiv­e. No one was more proud than Hart when, at the 89th Academy Awards, Horowitz became an Oscars hero when he stepped up to the mike in front of millions to tell the “Moonlight” crew they had actually won best picture, not his own “La La Land,” as originally announced.

“It was crazy!” said Horowitz, who found himself in the spotlight. “We went to make ‘Fast Color’ two days after the Oscars last year… it was nice to get away.”

This year’s Academy Awards were a much more relaxed affair for Hart and Horowitz, who had a lot of friends to cheer for, including “Call Me By Your Name” nominee Timothée Chalamet, who starred in “Miss Stevens.”

“Sitting at the Oscars Sunday night and hearing his name called and his little face up on that big screen — it was so wild,” said Hart.

One Oscars moment in particular reminded Hart of the kind of unifying power she hopes to convey onscreen and see build in the world around her.

“After Frances McDormand gave her amazing speech and left the stage, all of the other lead actress nominees got up and hugged in the middle of the auditorium,” she said. “It was this incredible moment, and I thought, ‘Only women would do that.’ ”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? JULIA HART and Jordan Horowitz, husband and wife, with their son, Arthur, made the genre-bending “Fast Color” together. They co-wrote it and she directed.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times JULIA HART and Jordan Horowitz, husband and wife, with their son, Arthur, made the genre-bending “Fast Color” together. They co-wrote it and she directed.
 ?? Jacob Yakob ?? GUGU MBATHA-RAW, who stars as a superhero mom in “Fast Color,” caught the filmmakers’ attention with her performanc­e in “Beyond the Lights.”
Jacob Yakob GUGU MBATHA-RAW, who stars as a superhero mom in “Fast Color,” caught the filmmakers’ attention with her performanc­e in “Beyond the Lights.”

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