quinta-feira, 25 de junho de 2015

Hitfix: Interview with Kristen and Jesse on the set of "American Ultra"


Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg are a couple in love -- and possibly death.

I'm on the set of "American Ultra," the Max Landis-scripted, Nima Nourizadeh-directed comedic action film that stars Stewart and Eisenberg as Phoebe and Mike, a slacker couple being pursued by heavily-armed contract killers. The reason? Mike is in fact a highly-trained government agent (with amnesia!) who's been marked as a "liability" and targeted for assassination.

We get to see some of the action go down on the film's New Orleans set, a warehouse that's been partially converted into a small-town grocery store. When we arrive they're in the midst of shooting a fight scene that sees Mike engaging in brutal, bloody battle with a number of enemies through aisles labeled "Fresh Produce," "Electronics," "Chips" and "Cleaning Products." In one corner of the warehouse, a giant green screen has been set up that in post will be replaced with the visual of a Humvee driven through the front of the store.

When we first arrive, Eisenberg -- his face painted with cuts and bruises -- is speaking into an intercom phone while crouched behind one of the checkstands at the front of the store.

"Hey Phoebe! I just wanted to say that I love you..." he begins. Around him, the ground is littered with soda cans and boxes of food. Overturned coolers, shattered glass. A smoke machine casts a hazy pall.

"Kill him! Kill him now!" someone yells. This is a cue for Eisenberg to switch from speaking directly to Phoebe to the killers holding her hostage.

"Give up! Just give up, give me my girlfriend and go home!" he yells.

Eisenberg concentrates intensely before each take. There is gunfire, lots of it. A shelf of candy next to the checkstand is blasted apart. Later, Eisenberg jumps up and hides behind a display. An assassin creeps up on him. Just as he rounds the corner, Eisenberg attacks him and throws him into a shelf. Grabs an eyeliner pencil. Stabs the assassin in the eye.

On the last take, Eisenberg gets carried away and pushes the actor/assassin a little too forcefully. He's okay. The room bursts into laughter.

"American Ultra" is, in case you haven't guessed from the above description or the previously-released trailer (embedded above), "American Ultra" is violent. Very violent. Not even Stewart's porcelain complexion escapes unscathed.

"I punch Kristen Stewart in the face so I'm looking forward to her fan base seeing that," co-star Topher Grace -- playing a villain described by Landis as "a CIA yuppie Richard III" -- when he stopped by to chat with us during a break from filming. "So I'll never have any friends in America."

Later we're corralled into a back room to sit down for a Q&A with Stewart and Eisenberg, who reunited on this film after starring together in Greg Mottola's sweet, underseen 2009 comedy "Adventureland."

"I jumped at working with Jesse again," says Stewart, reclining in a chair next to her co-star. "You know, we really had a good time on 'Adventureland' a couple of years ago. And I sort of declared we should definitely make a movie every five years, so just to be in keeping with that, [I] jumped on this one."

The feeling is, in case you couldn't guess, mutual.

"I couldn't say enough about her," Eisenberg gushes later. "She's a phenomenal actress. I remember when we were working together [on 'Adventureland'], she was 18 or 17 or something, and after like the first scene I just went over to the director and I said, 'She's really funny.' And he's like 'Yeah, I know.' I was like, 'No, no she's REALLY funny.' She's genuinely very funny...but she does it in a way that's like, without drawing attention to herself being funny. [...] She like is the least vain person you'll meet. And she's also like a very pretty woman, so it's --"

"He's really vain, all day long," Stewart ribs. "Like Jesus, he's in makeup so much longer than me, obviously."

We all laugh. Eisenberg goes on.

"Anyway, she seems to like serve the story and the other actors before herself. It's a wonderful quality. So it's nice."

"Likewise," Stewart counters.

The lovefest isn't a surprise. During the interview Stewart and Eisenberg come across as kindred souls. Both put out an energy that is at once laid-back and quietly anxious, and it's a vibration they share in sideways glances and brief fits of giggling. There is an unspoken communication happening that the rest of us aren't privy to.

As director Nourizadeh noted, Eisenberg's attachment made snagging Stewart a relatively painless prospect: "She was an easy one to go out to," he told us during dinner the  evening prior. "I just sent her a text and I said, 'Have you read that script yet?' And she went, 'The one with Jesse? Fuck yeah, dude, I'm in!' Like, that was it. Literally, that was it."


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