Monday, October 15, 2018

UPDATED: New Interview + Photoshoot of Dakota in "W" Magazine [October 2018 Issue]



Scans
         

Outtakes
         

Transcripted Article

DAKOTA JOHNSON, THE STAR OF LUCA GUADAGNINO'S UPCOMING SUSPIRIA, BEWITCHES IN HAUTE COUTURE.

Photographed and directed by Luca Guadagnino. 
Styled by Sara Moonves.

There is a scene in Suspiria, Luca Guadagnino's stylish homage to Dario Argento's 1977 cult horror classic, in which Dakota Johnson, who stars as an American ballet student erolled in a German school run by witches, is controlling the body of another woman. You watch, hands half-covering your eyes, as Johnson unleashes her supernatural powers by dancing and sends the other woman flailing around the studio, her doby torn and twisted, spewing all sorts of fluids. Needless to say, the film is deeply disturbing- as it was to the actors when shooting began. And according to Johnson, the only thing more difficult than watching it, was filming it. Here, the actress discusses the pain—and pleasure—of making the movie, as well as her reluctance as a model and current passion project.

This movie is… crazy. But then, I don’t watch a lot of horrors. What’s your take on it?

Dakota:
I have an interesting relationship with it, because we had such an intense time filming it. We all felt so wild and passionate about it; now to see it in final form is really a feeling of accomplishment. But it is crazy! It’s a crazy, crazy film, totally unsettling and it’s amazing how uncomfortable it makes you feel. If I hadn’t seen a lot of horror films, I’d think it’s a total mindfuck.

Your grandmother Tippi Hedren was a Hitchcock muse, so horror films are sort of in your blood.

Dakota:
I’m a fan of horrors. I’m really fascinated with mind-bending stories and Luca especially creates such an intricate aesthetic where the smallest detail will make you have the biggest feeling. But it’s a bit different with my grandmother and Hitchcock, whose films were more psychological. Suspiria is total horror psycho mania.

How did you get involved with it?

Dakota: Luca asked me if I would be interested while we were filming A Bigger Splash. Then I saw the original one. I was obviously really invested—really invested in Luca as a person, collaborator, artist… You just want to go on any adventure with him.

Your dance scenes are amazing. You must have trained hard for them.

Dakota: I danced ballet when I was young; I stopped when I was 14. A year prior to the shoot, I started to slowly work on my body with strength trainers, trying to work my body to a place where it looked like I had been a dancer for a long time. Then four to five months before filming, I began working with a choreographer. I was doing the final installment of 50 Shades at the time. Two to three months before, I went to Italy to work with a different choreographer and train with the dancers. I continued training on the my press tour and was looking at videos. I was doing it in hotel rooms across the world, like guerrilla training.

The dancing seemed very sensual, at least to me. Has doing 50 Shades made you more comfortable with being sexual on camera.

Dakota: Dance is sex for Suzy, my character. It’s beyond sex. It’s the most connected you can be to yourself, your soul. Suzy feels an unearthly pull from the center of her body. It’s sexual in an animalistic way. Sexual in an aggressive, exploratory way. But it’s not sexual to be sexy. Unlike 50 Shades, there’s nothing sexy about the film. I didn’t feel like I was exposing myself with this character.

You filmed in an abandoned hotel in the Italian Alps. Was it as creepy as it looked?

Dakota: I was having nightmares, crazy nightmares. It’s not like the set was cursed. But it was not an easy, breezy shoot. It was cold and dark, and people were getting injured. I got injured. My character Suzy has three to four dance numbers—well she’s in all the dance numbers, really. Then she has audition pieces—it was a lot of physical activity, on top of acting. We’d shoot all day, then spend a couple hours training in this cold, dank hotel. I hurt my back, then my muscle spasm got to a point where I couldn’t move. And there’s a language barrier, so it was difficult explaining my pain. Our first A.D. broke his leg—he fell onto one of the sets. It was a dangerous set. There were things like that that happened all the time.

Yikes. Hopefully being surrounded by an amazing cast—Tilda Swinton, Mia Goth, Ingrid Caven, and more—helped allay the doom.

Dakota: That was so much fun, working with these beautiful artists. Ingrid Caven is a true work of art. She had crazy stories about [the director Rainer Werner] Fassbinder, who she was married to. His films were very much an inspiration for the aesthetic of this movie.

Yes, that 1970s German look. Giulia Piersanti, who was a Celine knitwear designer, did an amazing job with the wardrobe.

Dakota: The costume department was so extraordinary—but that’s the way with all of Luca’s films. They had amazing vintage clothes and handmade pieces. There were some fabrics that I loved that I wanted to recover chairs in.

You teamed up again with Luca for this fashion shoot.

Dakota: Luca and I have made so many plans to do funny things. Like this fashion shoot, which is a funny little activity. It was great. But for me, fashion shoots are difficult. I don’t really thrive in them. I love clothes, I love fashion. But modeling—that’s not my bag. I’m just not the most comfortable. This shoot was different, though, because it was very much a character. We were shooting in this incredible house on the Upper West Side—it was crazy magnificent—and we created this story of a trapped housewife who completely loses her mind. I was also wearing couture and the makeup was insane, so it was fun to do something wild like that.

What other projects are you working on?

Dakota: I’m developing my production company. Now that I finally have time to make things, I’ve been putting energy and time towards developing certain projects. We’re working on a movie called Imbeciles, based on Adam Cohen’s book [Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck], which was on the New York Times Bestseller List. It’s about eugenics, and the American practice in the 1920s of sterilizing mentally incompetent people. I like projects that are a little bit off the beaten path.

Behind The Scene

1 comment:

  1. Captivated says: Dakota is such a hot tamale!

    ReplyDelete