USA TODAY International Edition

Kendrick draws from past abusive relationsh­ip

- Patrick Ryan

NEW YORK – Anna Kendrick is reclaiming her story. ● The Oscarnomin­ated actress is earning career- best reviews for “Alice, Darling” ( exclusivel­y in AMC theaters), playing a young woman trapped in an emotionall­y abusive relationsh­ip. Kendrick, 37, signed on to the project two years ago, as she was coming out of a long- term relationsh­ip with a psychologi­cally abusive ex.

Looking back on that experience, “it does feel like something was stolen ( from me),” Kendrick says. “Getting trapped in that loop of trying to make ( the relationsh­ip) better, and figure out a way to fix it, meant that I was also sacrificing more and more of myself.

“I was self- abandoning over and over and over again, and something was very lost for a long time. I’m still getting it back.”

‘ Alice, Darling’ depicts emotional toll

The dramatic thriller follows Alice ( Kendrick) as she takes a weekend getaway with her two best friends, Sophie ( Wunmi Mosaku) and Tess ( Kaniehtiio Horn). Alice is visibly uneasy throughout the trip, after lying to her controllin­g boyfriend, Simon ( Charlie Carrick), about her whereabout­s. Tess and Sophie glean something isn’t right with their friend, and try to help Alice recognize her abusive situation.

Alice had visible bruises in an earlier version of Alanna Francis’ script. But Kendrick, who also executive produced the film, felt it was important to show that not all abuse leaves marks. She imagined what it’d be like to watch this movie if she still was in that toxic relationsh­ip.

“I really didn’t want to make a film that I would have gone, ‘ Oh, well it’s not as bad as this movie. Maybe I’m just dealing with normal, healthy conflict,’ ” Kendrick says. “It’s a bold thing to just stay with the main character’s experience, rather than spoon- feeding an audience, ‘ Here’s the abuse you can point to.’ To just look at the ( psychologi­cal) effect that it’s having on a person and trust that it’s abusive.”

Instead, the film portrays the casually sinister ways that Simon messes with Alice’s head. He closely monitors where she goes and what she eats, and guilts her for grabbing drinks with friends.

“Those daily things add so many layers to the more obvious moments of abusive behavior,” Kendrick says.

Like Alice, Kendrick had good friends to lean on during her past relationsh­ip. But even then, she never painted the full picture.

“I kind of sprinkled all the gory details into conversati­ons with different friends,” Kendrick recalls. “Because I knew that if I told the whole thing to one person, that person would be like, ‘ Dude, run.’ ”

With the help of therapy, Kendrick was eventually able to acknowledg­e the abuse for what it was. Although she keeps details vague, a “huge turning point” was when she found “black- and- white evidence” that her partner was gaslightin­g her.

“I had every benefit in starting my recovery and it’s still so hard,” Kendrick says, holding back tears. “I really don’t know how people do it, just having to go, ‘ Well, I don’t have any evidence but I have to trust myself.’ It makes me want to cry.”

Ditching her perkiness and trusting herself

Beyond the film’s personal resonance, Kendrick also saw “Alice, Darling” as a chance to stretch herself beyond the peppy characters she’s played in “Pitch Perfect” and “Trolls.” The movie is light on dialogue, with long shots of Alice panicking over texts from Simon and worrying that he might show up.

Sometimes on screen, “I’ll maybe do a little too much,” Kendrick admits. “Because I’m like, ‘ Well, I have to make it interestin­g because I don’t trust that I can just exist and be compelling, or that anyone would invest in that character unless I’m sweating to be charismati­c.’ So frankly, feeling a little boring in the movie for stretches of time made me pretty uncomforta­ble. But it was kind of this weird parallel to trusting that I’m enough and that that would translate on screen.”

Since the movie premiered at Toronto Film Festival last fall, Kendrick has been asked to relive past trauma in countless interviews such as these. The experience so far has been mostly positive, she says.

“Making the movie, being around people who’ve had similar experience­s, and being really open about it, I don’t find triggering at all. It feels very warm and safe,” Kendrick says. “The only thing that’s felt icky is just being in an environmen­t where ( someone is) just the tiniest bit dismissive. It’s nobody’s job to come in and meet me where I’m at, but that’s why I’m trying to just make sure that I’m only talking about it in a space and in a way that feels OK.”

 ?? EMMA CLOSE- BROOKS/ LIONSGATE VIA AP ?? Sophie ( Wunmi Mosaku), left, Alice ( Kendrick), and Tess ( Kaniehtiio Horn) take a weekend trip in “Alice, Darling.”
EMMA CLOSE- BROOKS/ LIONSGATE VIA AP Sophie ( Wunmi Mosaku), left, Alice ( Kendrick), and Tess ( Kaniehtiio Horn) take a weekend trip in “Alice, Darling.”
 ?? ANNE- MARIE CARUSO/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Anna Kendrick said an abusive relationsh­ip stole something from her, and she’s “still getting it back.”
ANNE- MARIE CARUSO/ USA TODAY NETWORK Anna Kendrick said an abusive relationsh­ip stole something from her, and she’s “still getting it back.”

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