The Morning Call

Dafoe saw ‘a mission’ in film’s weather

- By Marc Malkin

CANNES, France — Willem Dafoe has spent the last two awards seasons on the campaign trail. The actor earned back-toback Oscar nomination­s for his work in 2017’s “The Florida Project” and for last year’s “At Eternity’s Gate.”

And if the critical reaction to “The Lighthouse” is any indication, he’ll be back on it soon.

“The Lighthouse” is director Robert Eggers’ black-and-white follow-up to his 2015 debut “The Witch.” Dafoe and Robert Pattinson star as 1890s lighthouse

“It’s cold, it’s miserable, (but) that’s kind of the point.” — Willem Dafoe, on the weather for “The Lighthouse”

keepers who slowly spiral into insanity as they tend to a lighthouse on a slab of rock in the middle of a brutal New England storm.

Oscar buzz began almost immediatel­y after the movie premiered at the Cannes Film Festival to ecstatic reviews for both Dafoe and Pattinson. Eggers is being hailed as the next big talent to look out for. “That’s good. I’ll take that,” Dafoe says when asked shortly after the premiere about the accolades. “I’m happy to hear that talk because that kind of recognitio­n really helps the movie.”

Shot on location in Nova Scotia, the real-life weather captured on film is the third star of “The Lighthouse.”

“It’s cold, it’s miserable, (but) that’s kind of the point,” Dafoe said. “We’re there on a mission. That helps sometimes with really extreme situations. The weather tells you what you need to do and you can’t act that red nose, that red runny nose and that shivering and that bone-cold tiredness.”

Dafoe says he and Pattinson approached the project completely differentl­y. Dafoe likes rehearsals whereas Pattinson didn’t want to reveal too much about his preparatio­n beforehand because his “Lighthouse” character not only has a mysterious past, but is a man of few

words. “We’re different, and the truth is, because our methods were different, they sort of mirrored the difference­s in the characters,” Dafoe said.

Dafoe is quick to point out that he thinks Pattinson is a “great guy.” There was no “personal animosity, (but) we didn’t have much contact as far as hanging out or anything like that,” he explained. “It wasn’t a method thing. We worked hard, and it was miserable weather so when you’re free, you head for cover.”

Dafoe was also at Cannes for “Tommaso,” his fifth collaborat­ion with director and writer Abel Ferrara. Dafoe plays a fictionali­zed version of Ferrara, who moved to Rome before getting sober several years ago.

Dafoe says Ferrara’s sobriety has allowed them to “collaborat­e in a much a deeper way” than they had before. “He’s always been a deeply sweet guy, but when someone has an addiction, there’s a devotion that distracts them,” Dafoe said.

 ?? JOHN PHILLIPS/GETTY ??
JOHN PHILLIPS/GETTY

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