Natalie Portman is an inspiration to women everywhere. As a highly in
demand actress, she has given life to many important women's stories that span
from the lives of a young, struggling orphan in New York City to a woman
struggling to fight an authoritarian, post-apocalyptic Britain. Portman is an
undoubtedly intelligent, activist fixture in Hollywood, and some of her films
are extensions of this mission. She has her own particular vision about what feminism looks like in Hollywood.
In Jane Got A Gun, Natalie Portman plays a frontierswoman named Jane Hammond, whose
husband ends up in the crosshairs of a band of dangerous outlaws led by
Colin McCann (Ewan McGregor). Jane’s only hope of saving him is her
ex-lover Dan Frost (Joel Edgerton), who had returned to find her a
married mother.
“I
loved the idea of a love story in the wild west because love seems like that
kind of lawless atmosphere,” said
Portman. “This story of this woman having to sort of
face her deepest fears in this really challenging environment was very parallel to sort of the
experience of making films.”
The epic love story told amidst the sprawling expanse
of the American west, Portman was quick to see the story’s potential and
optioned the project as her first producing venture.
“The West was
uncharted territory so there were many more opportunities for women to be free,” she notes. “Women could hold jobs and ranch and go to school
and vote for the first time. Those rights
happened for women first in the West.” Female empowerment was an essential aspect for survival. For
Portman, the harshness of the environment also meant that characters - both men
and women had to identify themselves as one thing or another. They had to have
strong self-definition to survive.
With Portman set to play Jane, the filmmakers started
the search to fill the male roles. After
an extensive casting process, Joel Edgerton signed on to play former soldier
and gunslinger Dan Frost, Noah Emmerich
won the part of Jane’s husband, Ham, Rodrigo Santoro was cast as Fitchum, a
member of Bishop’s gang, with Ewan McGregor playing John Bishop.
As the first actor attached to the film, Portman had
ample time to explore Jane’s characterization. “I really loved seeing this woman come up
against so much and really
find her own strength,” recalls Portman. She found
producing Jane Got A Gun an invaluable experience to bring to her
role. “Jane’s process was also
my process,” says Portman. “It
was a relevant parallel experience of learning how to stand
my ground, face difficult times and not crumble.”
Edgerton sees Portman as being a great choice,
physically and mentally, for the character. “Jane’s
got to be a really tough woman. There’s
a softness to Natalie, but you can also see a switch of real strength in her. Her vulnerability and steeliness are
hand-in-hand. That strength is going
to come from inside and it’s more interesting when it’s in someone of Natalie’s
frame.”
Portman sees the same qualities in Edgerton. “Joel’s ability to be both
strong and vulnerable are the exact qualities he needed to bring
to the role of Dan,” says
Portman. “Dan makes the difficult choice and puts his life on the
line to save Jane and her family. His
decision is guided by his love for Jane.”
Joel Edgerton sees Dan as a former soldier and
gunslinger who gets a second chance. “Dan’s
become an alcoholic because he’s lost
Jane. It’s a love story about two people finding each other again and understanding their pasts. They discover the truth
under very difficult circumstances
and get back to the place they were before, under very difficult
circumstances.”
The third point of the love triangle, Bill “Ham”
Hammond, becomes Jane’s husband after rescuing her from John’s gang. “Ham’s got a deep
moral center and is a good man, who fell in with a group of outlaws,” explains Emmerich. His relationship with Jane
brings happiness and purpose but also places them both in peril. “Jane
marries Ham as a way out of a terrible situation,” says Portman. “What started
as a need for a protector changes when she grows to love him?”
Emmerich adds. “There’s this great love triangle between
Jane, my character Ham and Joel Edgerton's character, Dan. I've never seen it
in a Western. So the film has the male
essence that we associate with the Western, but it's interesting to have a
female voice in the middle of all that.”
The Bishop gang’s attack on Ham becomes the turning
point in Jane’s life. “In order to save her family, Jane has to stop running and
start fighting,” explains Portman. “She decides to take control, and by doing
so, discovers aspects of herself she had always sought in the men in her life.”
“This is not
necessarily a story that ends well, but ultimately for Jane there is a real
development and something inspirational for her,” explains Edgerton. “What she’s gone
through has damaged her, but also gave her something to live for, and the
realization that she doesn’t really need the support of other people to move
forward.”
“The Western
aspect of this movie is a metaphor for love, and the ways we hurt each other
and we can’t take it back,” explains Portman. “Once you do something, you
can damage a relationship
irreparably. The devastating thing about Dan and Jane is that it’s just too
late for them.”
Jane’s nemesis, John Bishop, is played by Ewan McGregor. He describes Bishop as “Someone you wouldn’t
want to cross. He is able to employ charm to get what he wants in a
manipulative sort of fashion, but I certainly don’t think of him as being a
charming character in the true sense of the word.” McGregor had no reservations
about portraying the villain of the story. “Who doesn’t want to be in a
Western? And who doesn’t want to play the villain in a Western? You can't
approach a part playing a bad guy or a good guy. You have to play a human
being. So I didn’t approach it any
differently than I would any other part.”
Portman comments. “Ewan is such a phenomenal actor, and I
don't think we've ever really gotten to see him play a villain before. He's so
cming that you can see how he could really charm you into destroying your
own life, the way he does with Jane.” “Ewan’s amazing and the best choice to
play John. He has the charisma, the energy and the excitement to bring to the
role.”
Portman offers, “It’s always wonderful when people make
art in unfamiliar surroundings. Tolstoy’s theory is about how art is about
making things strange, and with an Australian and a Brazilian on board its
already strange and so it’s immediately art. That’s why Sergio Leone made such
great Westerns – – to have that completely different, non-American vision of
the West.”
“JANE GOT A GUN” is released and distributed by CAPTIVE CINEMA.
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