![]() Were you comfortable with the overt sexuality that was putting out there at the beginning of the film or did you have to find a place in your head to do that? She has all her mom's hand-me-downs and looks different in high school. But the coolest thing ever that I loved and thought was the best choice that Abe made was that Danielle was much more a '70's girl than an '80's girl. Costumes, too: you hold yourself differently in the costumes. I didn't see people doing that at The Roosevelt on a Saturday night! And the way that the set was dressed, the way that you walked into your bedroom – it's a whole different world that you're invited to that feels different and smells different, everything. The music: Abe gave us the soundtrack from the get-go because we were rehearsing the dance routines, too. McDonald's, Burger King Face Lawsuits for Using ‘Forever Chemicals' in Packaging How did you connect to the subtle differences of that time period? Were you even born in the ‘80s? Pac-Man or a Rubik’s Cube on every table top. This isn't an typical movie set in the ‘80s that's so on the nose and in your face with Ms. Danielle was one of the coolest roles that I'd ever read in my life.” I love that, where someone is having a conversation with somebody but they're thinking about someone else, that kind of thing. There are so many different things going on behind her eyes. ![]() ![]() It is – it's a dream role for any young woman to play, and not only all the different emotions going on, but she's also got so many layers going on down there in a big way. “Yeah, I read the script and wanted to be involved in it so badly. Was this just a dream, in terms of testing your range? In this role you get to do a little bit of everything: be sexy, funny and nasty you get to cry and scream and fight with people. PopcornBiz caught up with the movie star-in-the-making. Playing Danielle, a slutty Southern trailer-park teen who forms an unlikely bond with Clarke (newcomer Jeremy Dozier), a gay teen from an abusive home, as they road trip away from their family dramas, Temple is the crackling lightning rod at the center of writer-director Abe Sylvia's knowing film, a movie so adroitly '80s it almost seems made in the era. Anderson’s hyper-kinetic take on “ The Three Musketeers”, and next year’s breathlessly awaited Batman sequel “ The Dark Knight Rises,” but it’s in the tiny, captivating indie “Dirty Girl” – that Temple truly announces herself as an emerging talent to be reckoned with. Juno Temple is a woman on the verge a major breakthrough.Īudiences are going to get a taste of what Temple, the 22-year-old daughter of film director Julien Temple (“Absolute Beginners”), can do with stints in high-profile films like Paul W.S. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |