USA TODAY US Edition

She’s all over the map

Elizabeth Olsen has two diverse films with ‘Wind River,’ ‘Ingrid’

- Patrick Ryan

If you need an Instagram-worthy brunch snap, don’t pass your phone to Martha Stewart.

“She’s the worst food photograph­er in the whole world — she makes Jean- Georges food look like dog food,” jokes Elizabeth Olsen, who admits her own nosh photos are similarly unappetizi­ng. “My life revolves around prepping dinner for my family or friends, and making my breakfast look nice, but ( my pictures) always look bad. It’s like Martha.”

Fortunatel­y, Olsen’s foray into food photograph­y was only to research her role as an enviable Instagram “influencer” in dark comedy Ingrid Goes West (in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles, expands nationwide Aug. 25), one of two films she stars in this month, the other being Taylor Sheridan’s chilly murder mystery Wind River (now showing in New York and Los Angeles; expands to 17 cities Friday, including San Francisco, Atlanta, Chicago and Philadelph­ia).

In the latter, Olsen, 28, co-stars with her Avengers castmate Jeremy Renner as Jane Banner, a rookie FBI agent assigned to investigat­e the rape and death of a young Native-American woman on Wyoming’s Wind River Indian Reservatio­n.

Signing on, she hoped to shed light on female sexual assault, particular­ly in the Native-American community, where missing women often go unreported. The actress also wanted “to play someone with the confidence and fortitude of Jane,” Olsen says. “She’s not jaded yet and emotionall­y invests in trying to find out what happened.”

The Olsen twins’ younger sister was timorous about a winter shoot in the Utah wilderness, but wound up having “the best time,” she says, learning to snowmobile and training in martial arts and gun work.

The frosty conditions only sweetened her return to Los Angeles a few months later, when she slipped into the boho-chic garb of Ingrid’s Taylor Sloane, who becomes the social media obsession and narcissist­ic BFF of Aubrey Plaza’s stalkerish title character.

“I have been looking for comedies my whole career,” Olsen says. “I don’t think anyone thinks of me for a comedy,” given her résumé of monster movies ( Godzilla) and low-budget dramas ( Martha Marcy May Marlene).

“Lizzie’s incredibly talented, but also when you look at her, she seems perfect in a weird way,” says Ingrid director/co-writer Matt Spicer. “We didn’t have a lot of time to set up (the idea of ) ‘Why does Ingrid become obsessed with this person?’ We needed the audience to just look at her and get it.”

Unlike the avocado toast-snapping Taylor, Olsen’s social-media presence is tenuous. She uses her Instagram account to promote projects and occasional­ly shares self-aware snaps, like paparazzi shots of her eating (hashtagged #feedmefrid­ays).

“If people don’t understand your personalit­y because you’re nervous in interviews or you come across weird on camera, (Instagram is) your way of showcasing your sense of humor,” Olsen says.

She heads to Atlanta this fall to shoot the still-untitled sequel to Avengers: Infinity War, returning as Scarlet Witch.

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY ??
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY ?? Elizabeth Olsen has two films out this month. Her character Taylor, left, and Ingrid (Aubrey Plaza) become BFFs in Ingrid Goes West.
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY Elizabeth Olsen has two films out this month. Her character Taylor, left, and Ingrid (Aubrey Plaza) become BFFs in Ingrid Goes West.
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 ?? FRED HAYES, THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY ?? Olsen works with Graham Greene to solve a girl’s murder in Wind River.
FRED HAYES, THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY Olsen works with Graham Greene to solve a girl’s murder in Wind River.

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