'Frankenstein' star James Ellery and the 'Marty old man' actor joined the cast of the Hollywood actor.
'I Just Started Weeping': Jacob Elordi and Gwyneth Paltrow in 'Frankenstein' and 'Marty Supreme' - And How Movies Have Changed Since the '90s
It doesn't matter how high you go up the Hollywood ladder, there's always room to grow.Just ask Gwyneth Paltrow, the perennial A-List star and fashion icon who won Best Actress for Shakespeare in Love in 1999, and is still in Oscar history.These days, Paltrow has been busy as the CEO of a lifestyle brand.But later this month, a seasonal movie star in 1950s New York City, In Josh Safdie's directorial debut Marty Ali, he took semi-retirement to play a seasonal movie star in The Ping-Pong Phenomenon.
The long-awaited return to the screen when Jacob Elordi, with the amazing career of "That Boy" in New Hollywood, was featured as the creature in Guillermo del Toro's "Frankenstein".Elordi, 28, shared with Paltrow how she found the strength and grace to play a movie monster, while also sharing the story of Wild West movies (aka the '90s) and advice she gave her age.
Gwyneth Paltrow: it's about you.My children are jealous.My son looked at you;My daughter loves you.I can, at the end of it.
Jacob Elordi: Well, that's what you always get.Every man says, isn't it, "I love you."
Paltrow: I love you, Jacob.My first note was about you and your incredible talent.My kids were wary of watching me, but you are so good at these shows.
Elordi: Thank you for saying that.Was this worrying for you as a parent?It seems very extreme to me.I don't know how it can be related.
Paltrow: I'm not worried.My children did not follow those paths.Some things they felt were right - the relationship aspect and social media.
Elordi: I recently shot the new season and it's something completely different.
Paltrow: Is your character cuter?
Elordi: I really think so.I don't know if it will work or not.Probably what I did wasn't good.That's why 'Marty Supreme' is such a good movie.Are you familiar with "Uncut Gems"?
Paltrow: I hadn't been in the movie business for a while, and I wasn't up to the crowds.I watched “Unknown Gems” and thought it was brave.Josh Safae has a certain way.I met him and he's just brilliant at creating the world in his head.
Elordi: Is this how you always approached filmmaking, director first?Your list!I mean: Paul Thomas Anderson, Alfonso Cuaron, Steven Spielberg, David Fincher.
Paltrow: Wes Anderson, Anthony Minghella.
Elordi: Was it conscious? I really don't know what your relationship is with movies. You grew up with them. How did you manage to work with everyone in recent film history who had something to say?
Faltrow: I was really lucky.Paul Thomas Anderson never did a [Hard Eight"] movie. I was the first person and director in his early career. For example, I was almost in "Rushmore," but it didn't work. I was in "Royal Tenenbaums," and I was so happy, it was an amazing cast.
Red: This character is permanently injected.
Paltrow: She defined a certain type of cool girl - unhappy, smoking in the bath, writing plays.es is amazing.Ober I also made a lot of strange decisions and some not-so-good movies.What about you?
Elordi: I first booked this movie, “Swinging Safari,” which is about the 1970s in Australia.Then I booked a movie on Netflix called “The Kissing Booth” when I was about 18. I came to America and thought I was on to something and I arrived in Los Angeles.And it was….
Paltrow: It can be sobering.
Elordi: Yes.Two years later I got "Euphoria".It's not a long time in the order but for me it was like nails on a blackboard.
Paltrow: Who Thought A Movie Career In Hollywood Was Possible?
Wardi: I was very loud as a child, which every actor is.They don't know what to do with me.There is a teacher at the school, Mrs. McMahon, who decided to send me as the cat in the musical "The Furry Hat".
Paltrow: You nailed it.
Elordi: As soon as I wore a big hat and sang and danced, I knew that's what I wanted to do.I also saw Heath Ledger in "The Dark Knight" when I was about 12 years old.I recognized that he was from Australia, and then the cogs started to turn that this might be something I could do.
Paltrow: You were great in "Frankpein."I'm really happy with it - it's almost like seeing pictures around you, how it's reflected in this character.This dynamic between love and violence is incredible.I am very happy.
Elordi: Thank you.My sister is a ballet dancer, so I grew up around that movement.This is a benchmark for how to use my body.I have dreamed of working with Guillermo del Toro since I saw 'pan's labyrinth' as a child.Later, I shot this film 'Priscilla', where I will play Elvis Phorley, so I have a kind of unnatural learning and confidence.The hair and makeup team told me they were going to do 'Frankenstein' next, and I remember saying, 'I should be in this movie.'
They asked me if I was serious because they already had another actor.I laughed it off as a joke and then a year later the actor dropped out.The hairy guy went to Guillermo and said, "I don't know if you know who he is, but maybe you should think about it."
Paltrow: The great thing about being an artist is that you feel blessed to be able to make a living from your art and your passion, but it can also turn into a job.
Elordi: It's starting to finish.I used to be one of those people who thought, "The worst day on a movie set is still better than the best day in the real world."And that's bullshit.That's a damn lie.But it was nice to have [a project like "Frankenstein"] to recapture that feeling.I took a seven-year hiatus, was it a feeling of "Should I get away from this?"
Paltrow: I felt very lonely doing it.20 I still don't know myself very well, and I'm always on my way.Growing up and realizing who I really am. I also got a lot of answers through my family, and then I started doing Marty Ali, which was amazing because I had kids. Ours is going.It felt like the movies we did in the 90s.
ELLORY: You have this moment in the movie where you leave the stage and turn to the audience, then the lights come up and you say your first line and the audience explodes.I just started crying.The look on your face was honest and sincere at the same time.This person's whole life was in the joy of that audience.Was there an old star who voiced your character?
Paltrow: I was watching Hitchcock's peak from the '50s, and the people were normal.I brought a little.Therefore, the Internet is about the height of the operator.
Elordi: They should stay.Although, one of them dropped the phone, and I was like, "Take it away from me."When was the last time you were on stage?[What led me to lead the Emerald Fennell] is "Skyburn."What a pleasure when I read "Salburn," I thought on, "The law that Judis in this movie is because of 'Cool'."But then I realized that this is not the same.I don't use it as it is called.When was the last time you were on stage?
Paltrow: It was so long ago. It was in 2002 when I was filming Proof in London.
elaf scam - do you think you're coming back?
Paltrow: I would.I promised my mother [Blythe Danner] that I would do a show sometime.
Elordi: I'd love to see you on stage, especially at that "after the brand" moment.
Paltrow: I hope my comments are not as bad as my character.
Elordi: This is so lame, when the camera cuts you will cry during this review.
Paltstrow: The writers actually rewrote the entire review and it's so brutal.Yes, it gets me.
Ego: Timothy "and the great portyer" is amazing.He is amazing.He is famous.His last leaf is one of the most painful.You have worked with some of the biggest stars in the history of motion pictures.These guys, you've worked with these guys for years, you're like, '90s work?
Paltrow: It was great.I wasn't that good at it either, so I started to go down a little bit.He misses me a lot.Courage to play a character without character.A lot of times when an actor takes a character apart, you can see them on [it] - but He plows through it.He's just a dick.
Elordi: They make you feel better about things.If people continue to be interested in movies in every generation, they can keep them alive.My biggest fear is that movies lose their value. And that storytelling is no longer available.
Paltrow: It's changed a lot, and business models and how everything is marketed.Does this seem particularly different to you?
Elodri: It's a very different feeling.I think you grow up as an actor and crush all those movies and dreams.This is the movie you want, and then I think everyone can audition, book that, and go out to Hollywood and be like…
Paltrow: Where did they go?But I think something like ["Marty Supim"] happened on the hyper-commercial front, that you started to see real artists emerge.
Elordi: I agree with you.That makes me happy.I have one more question.You won an Oscar for "Shakespeare in Love".How do you watch these movies or how do you work?It is very important.As an actress and as an actor, something changes people about you and your work.I guess there is pressure.
Paltrow: It was like something big had happened.There was this huge surge of energy and it was so debilitating. I was only 26. If I could go back and talk to myself at that age, I would say, "Take your time."Just meeting who you are as much as possible and making decisions from there.PUSH AND USE with great people and don't beat yourself up too much along the way.
Elordi: Being alive can feel like “yes” or “no” or “yes” or “no.”Do I want to live or do I want to die?It seems like that sometimes.So I really can't do that.You only have to go outside Los Angeles or New York for 20 minutes to realize that it's forever.
