Naomi
Watts. Photo: Sahlan Hayes
Disaster proves harrowing for Naomi Watts, too, writes The Sydney
Morning Herald’s Steven Rea
'Fear takes us to so many different places,'' Naomi Watts says. ''You can't really judge. One person's suffering is going to manifest itself differently than another's.''
'Fear takes us to so many different places,'' Naomi Watts says. ''You can't really judge. One person's suffering is going to manifest itself differently than another's.''
The Australian actress is mulling how different people react in
the face of catastrophe. Some summon up untapped courage, generosity,
selflessness. And then there's the guy in The
Impossible, the film Watts stars in with Ewan McGregor - based on
the real-life ordeal of a family that is literally swept away in the 2004
Indian Ocean tsunami - who won't lend out his mobile phone. So what if
McGregor's character, lost and in shock, needs to let his parents know he is
alive?
Set in Thailand, and inspired by the experiences of the Alvarez
Belons, a family of five on Christmas vacation at a coastal resort when the
tidal waves came crashing in, The
Impossible screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in
September.
Watts has received best-actress nominations from the Screen Actors
Guild and the Golden Globes for her portrayal of Maria, who is separated from
her husband and two youngest boys, and caught in a raging current of water and
debris with her oldest son (a remarkable Tom Holland).
The first half of J.A. Bayona's masterful disaster movie follows
Maria, who is resolved to find her family, to survive, no matter what. In
Thailand, the tsunami resulted in more than 5000 deaths, with an additional
2800 missing and unaccounted for.
''If there is any good coming out of these kinds of disasters … it
is that it strips away everything else,'' says Watts, speaking in Toronto.
''People come together. It's not about class and it's not about race. It's
about: How are we going to get through this? And that's when the space for
humanity comes back into it.''
Except for that guy with the mobile phone, maybe.
''Well,'' Watts adds with a smile, ''not always, but maybe the
next moment.''
The star of David Lynch's Mulholland
Drive, of David Cronenberg's Eastern
Promises, of Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's 21 Grams, Watts says that
making The Impossible
- while nothing compared to what her real-life counterpart experienced - was
physically harrowing work.
Those scenes of Watts swirling in the waves, with tree limbs and
car parts shooting past her - that is not computer-generated imagery. ''I
didn't know it was going to be so difficult,'' she says. ''They had it all very
well prepared - we had allegedly the second largest water tank in the world,
and they had these giant cups that we were anchored into … so you were just
above water level, you could use your head, and you could use your arms so you
looked like you were swimming … and you're on this track, and then a giant wave
was coming towards you … and then side pumps were shooting more water, and all
the garbage and debris …
''So, it got increasingly difficult, and then we noticed that we
couldn't actually act, or speak. We were lucky if we could get one word out,
and that word would be 'LU-CAS (Holland's character, Maria's son.)!'''
''It was tough, and then the underwater stuff was even more
difficult. That was very scary,'' she says. ''But it was all marginal compared
to what Maria and her family went through.''
Watts met with Maria Belon before shooting began.
''I didn't want to pry too much,'' she says. ''I didn't want to
seem too actor-y. But she had so much to say, so it was perfect,'' Watts
recalls. ''And something that I didn't quite understand at the time was that
she said she felt completely sure of her instinct. That nothing got in the way
of it. And she'd never had that feeling before. Which made her incredibly
heroic, because every decision she makes seemed to be the right one.
''And I think that instinct is in us all, but it's so easy to
second-guess, isn't it?
''Not that I want a disaster like this to happen for me to get to
that place; it just overcame her, and she never doubted herself. And that's
just an admirable strength in anyone, and it got her to that place of purity.''
The Philadelphia Inquirer
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