Blanchett, Del Toro On The Femme Fatale Of 'Nightmare Alley'
Blanchett, Del Toro On The Femme Fatale Of 'Nightmare Alley'
With a touch of Barbara Stanwyck, a sumptuous Art Deco office and a deadly shade of crimson lipstick, Cate Blanchett plays a femme fatale in Guillermo del Toros Nightmare Alley with cunning embrace and subversion of the film noir archetype.

NEW YORK: With a touch of Barbara Stanwyck, a sumptuous Art Deco office and a deadly shade of crimson lipstick, Cate Blanchett plays a femme fatale in Guillermo del Toros Nightmare Alley with cunning embrace and subversion of the film noir archetype.

If Nightmare Alley is del Toros lushly composed love letter to noir, the movies pulpy heart is in Blanchetts conniving psychiatrist Lilith Ritter. She doesnt enter the film until halfway through, when Bradley Coopers carnival huckster, Stan, catches her eye in his nightclub mind-reading act, and the two begin scheming together. But when she does turn up, Blanchett shifts the film’s fable-like frequency, conjuring deeper shades of mystery from the movies rich tapestry of shadow and fate.

We tailored the part for her, but she fit in those clothes on the first try, says del Toro.

In period films like Carol, The Good German and The Aviator, Blanchett has often evoked a classical kind of mid-century movie stardom. But in Nightmare Alley, an adaptation of the 40s novel first made into Edmund Golding’s well-regarded 1947 film (currently streaming on the Criterion Channel), Blanchett slides into one of the movies most iconic types by trading less on her characters seductiveness than on her razor-sharp intellect.

What I thought was timely and dangerous about this story was its an exploration of the truth, Blanchett said in an interview from Brighton, England. Playing such a deliberately mysterious and ambiguous character I found really challenging because you have to know theres a lot going on, but youre never invited into exactly what shes thinking.

Its one of two roles this December for Blanchett that revolve centrally around American deception and disinformation. There’s Nightmare Alley, currently in theaters, and Adam McKays Dont Look Up, which arrives Friday on Netflix. In the latter, she plays a TV morning news anchor who cheerfully steers the news away from an impending asteroid doomsday and toward lighter subjects like the sex appeal of Leonardo DiCaprios scientist.

There may be something timeless about Blanchett in Nightmare Alley, but to her, both films are characterized by their timeliness.

It was such a privilege to be on a film set in this particular point in human history,” Blanchett says. One should always be alive to the time in which what youre making is going to be viewed. I never felt that more profoundly than making these two films.

Blanchett and del Toro had discussed various projects for years but came together for the first time on Nightmare Alley. (She also voices a role in the directors upcoming stop-motion animated Pinocchio another film about truth telling.)

Del Toro, who calls his kinship with author James M. Cain profound, had long pined to pay tribute to noir. His affection for the genre runs deep. In his previous film, the best-picture Oscar-winner The Shape of Water, del Toro explicitly referenced Otto Premingers Fallen Angel. An avid collector, del Toro calls the portrait that hangs in Premingers Laura the one prop I would kill to own.

I read all of (Raymond) Chandler right before I married, says del Toro. Im not sure why.

Del Toro scripted Nightmare Alley with film critic Kim Morgan, whom he wed earlier this year. His taste in noir leans toward seedy, rather than the more elegant varieties, and films that inhabit an audacious psychology.

I like these characters, like Bette Davis in Beyond the Forest, who are too smart for their environment, he says. I root for them not because I think they do things that are good but because I agree that they are left without recourse in what seems like a rigged game. Thats the noir that I find interesting.

One touchstone for Nightmare Alley was 1949s Too Late for Tears, a nasty noir starring Lizabeth Scott as a housewife who finds a bag full of cash. (Del Toro and Morgan screened it recently on TCM.) Tasting a chance for freedom from her husband and more, Scotts character clings to the money. Del Toro and Morgan envisioned Lilith similarly as operating within a male-controlled society.

Frankly, its the character I was completely passionate about creating with Cate, he says. Shes almost like an avenger. We said: Whatever happened to her in the past, shes sort of righting the wrongs.

To Blanchett, the term femme fatale suggests a diabolical woman like a siren seeking to draw the male character onto the rocks to destroy them for no reason apart from they have diabolical urges.

Blanchett and del Toro instead played with subtle gradations in Liliths motives. Blanchett thought one line of dialogue was too straightforward, and del Toro agreed in cutting it. But he still quotes the speech a little ruefully: Do you know what it is for a woman like me to grow up in a town where the smartest man is just a stupid beast?

Even though theres nothing explicit that Lilith says about her background, theres a sense that shes damaged goods from the system, that she wants to burn down and shes going to use Stan to do it, says Blanchett. Her faith in him and the men who run the system is nonexistent.

Del Toro shot Blanchetts scenes with Cooper, he says, like three 5-10-minute miniature plays. Inside Lilith’s ornate, wood-paneled office, the two con artists dance a shifting drama told through blocking and camera movement. It’s a chess game that Lilith, inevitably, will win.

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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