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Making the Hit

Posted by Holli on 22 Apr 2010 / 30 Comments

As far as entrances go, it ranks up there with Barbra Streisand’s as Fanny Brice purring “Hello, Gorgeous!” Hit Girl, the 12-year-old masked vigilante in a purple Clara Bow wig and leather jumpsuit crashes into the villain’s hideout, strikes a menacing pose, and utters the line, “Okay, you guys…let’s see what you can do now.”

Only she doesn’t say “guys”—she uses one of the most offensive words in the English language, before proceeding to unleash bloody vengeance upon the bad guys. This is how “Kick-Ass,” the new action-comedy about ordinary people striving to be superheroes, introduces Hit Girl, played by Chloë Grace Moretz. Up to this point, the film’s audience has only seen her as her alter ego, hyper-intelligent but sweet Mindy Macready, and has no idea of just what she is capable.

Hollywood, however, seems to be well aware of just how much the 13-year-old Moretz can handle. Though it’s a cliché to talk about child actors as wise beyond their years, its pretty much a given in the case of this one, who is quickly making a name as the go-to young performer for heady material. After counseling Joseph Gordon-Levitt on love in last year’s “[500] Days of Summer,” Moretz played a world-weary student in the recent “Diary of a Wimpy Kid.” “Kick-Ass,” which opens this week, will find her performing stunts and spouting dialogue actors twice her age would blush at. And in the fall, she’ll appear as a hundreds-year-old vampire trapped in the body of a 12-year-old girl in “Let Me In,” the American remake of the Swedish drama “Let the Right One In.” And she recently signed on to star for director Martin Scorsese in his historical drama “The Invention of Hugo Cabret.” Moretz already has big fans in her directors and co-stars—including Nicolas Cage, who plays Hit Girl’s warped but loving father, Big Daddy. “I knew she was going to be an enormous star because of how well she performed,” Cage says, adding he gave Moretz a silver starfish necklace when the film wrapped “because real stars are nice people, and that’s what she is.”

Summer Days

On a sunny day at the Farmer’s Market in Beverly Hills, Moretz appears like any other teenage girl, not someone who was the toast of the South by Southwest Film Festival only hours earlier when “Kick-Ass” premiered to a rapturous audience. Eating a glazed doughnut and teasing her elder brother Trevor, she is discussing her Twitter account (at @chloegmoretz) and coming to the realization that she’s going to have to start being more careful about tweeting her locations.

It’s because of Trevor, now in his 20s, that Moretz became interested in acting. The youngest of five siblings and the only girl, Moretz was living with her family in Georgia when Trevor was accepted into the Professional Performing Arts School in New York. Moretz, her brother Colin, and her mother moved with Trevor so he could attend the high school, and a 6-year-old Moretz found herself stealing her brother’s sides when he brought them home. She had always been a bit of a performer; she can recall at age 4 how Trevor would dress her up in various outfits and film her—most memorably as Princess Leia floating in the pool while being attacked by a sea monster, played by the cleaning tube. But while in New York, she began begging her mother to let her go on auditions. “She would say, ‘I don’t know, Chloë; it’s not a business for kids,’ ” Moretz admits. “She kept asking, ‘Is this really something you want with your heart and soul?’ and I would say yes. I love it.”

After Moretz’s year and a half in New York, her father’s plastic-surgery business had him relocating the entire family to Los Angeles, where Moretz was finally allowed to go on auditions. Manager Pam Gold, who had met Trevor through school, also agreed to represent Moretz, and soon she landed her first role on two episodes of the CBS series “The Guardian.” According to Moretz, being on set felt remarkably natural. “There wasn’t much difference between being in front of a camera there and what I was doing in the pool,” she says with a shrug. She also had the aid of an in-house teacher. “Trevor is actually my acting coach,” she notes. “He’s the only person I’ve ever studied with, and he’s amazing.” She points out that Trevor is now offering his coaching services in L.A. (www.trevordukemoretzstudio.com).

Roles in “The Amityville Horror” and “The Eye” followed, as did a role as Peter Krause’s daughter on the ABC series “Dirty Sexy Money,” but Moretz considers “[500] Days of Summer” her biggest onscreen break. She sounds like an old pro when she says, “I knew the film had Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel, and I’d always wanted to work with them and always wanted to do a movie like that.” It only took one audition with the casting director and one with the producers and director for Moretz to land the role.

Not that it was always easy for her. “You’ll get a thousand noes and one yes,” she says of auditioning. “There’s a couple parts that I really wanted badly that I didn’t get. But I tell myself that when a door shuts, another bigger, more beautiful door opens.” She cites Olympian Michael Phelps, who was diagnosed with ADHD when he was 9 years old. “People will say you have limits, but you have to brush it off,” says Moretz. “They say you’re not good, or you’re too good. They say you’re too scripted, you’re too pretty, you’re too young, you’re too tall. But you get that one that says you’re perfect, and you book it.”

The Girl for the Job

To avoid getting too attached to roles, Moretz says she usually doesn’t read entire scripts until she gets the part. But two years ago, her mother brought her a screenplay and said, “Chloë, it’s what you’ve been wanting.” Moretz had recently seen “Wanted” and longed for an action role in the vein of Angelina Jolie’s Fox. The script was “Kick-Ass,” and Moretz instantly fell in love with the characters. “I read the script and said, ‘I have to be Hit Girl,’ ” she recalls. “It was an amazing character and so different from what any other kid has done, aside from my idols: Natalie Portman in ‘The Professional’ and Jodie Foster in ‘Taxi Driver.’ ”

Moretz put herself on tape for “Kick-Ass” co-writer and director Matthew Vaughn, then tried not to think about it too much. Months later, she was skateboarding in Santa Monica when her manager called and said Vaughn was in town and wanted to meet her. “I was wearing jeans and a pink top and looked really cute, but I thought I had to be a tomboy, so I threw a big jacket on and hid my outfit,” Moretz recalls. “Then Matthew started talking about how Hit Girl is actually a girlie girl, and I said, ‘Oh! Well, this is me!’ I unzipped the jacket, and he saw I was pink and frilly, and he said, ‘That’s Hit Girl!’ From there, we really hit it off.”

Vaughn had thought casting Hit Girl would be his most difficult task, so he almost couldn’t believe his luck when Moretz was only the second girl he saw. He asked Charlie Cox, the star of Vaughn’s previous film “Stardust,” to read with Moretz and recalls how impressed the actor was. “Halfway through the first take, [Cox] looks at me and mouths, ‘Shit, I have to raise my game,’ ” Vaughn says. “That happened with every actor: They’d be talking to her like she was a 7-year-old, and then I called ‘Action!’ and all of them would be like, ‘I am being blown off screen by a child!’ “

To play the role, Moretz endured two months of basic training before filming began. She learned combat training, gymnastics, bow staff, and how to take apart a gun and put it back together. “Even on my days off, I was training from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.,” she reveals. “Every single day I would wake up, do crunches, pull-ups, push-ups and go do my training, then come home and go running and swimming. Somewhere in there, I would fit in school.” Moretz is homeschooled by her mother, Teri, whom Moretz frequently refers to as “my best friend for life.”

As for the violence and language the role requires, Moretz shrugs and says, “It’s a movie. It’s a character—a great character—and a role that challenged me and stretched me as an actor.” But Vaughn was aware they were in treacherous territory; when he had originally tried to obtain financing for “Kick-Ass,” many studios blanched. “Most of them said they liked the concept but only if it was done in a PG-13 manner, with no Hit Girl,” he reveals. And though the aforementioned line is in the comic upon which the film is based, he admits it was left out of the original script. It wasn’t until they were filming the scene on set that Vaughn realized the takes weren’t having the right impact. Teri had read the comic and understood the importance of the right word. “She and Chloë agreed that it made sense to shoot one take with the word included,” Vaughn says. That take has ended up not only in the final film but in the wildly popular red band trailer, and it reassured leagues of worried fanboys that the film will retain the same dark, subversive tone of the graphic novel.

Playing the Vamp

If “Kick-Ass” was the most physically challenging experience of her life, Moretz says her work in “Let Me In” was the most difficult for her to tackle emotionally. Writer-director Matt Reeves (“Cloverfield”) knew his film hinged on the right actor to play Abby, the female vampire trapped in a state of arrested development who relies on a guardian (Richard Jenkins) and a young boy (“The Road” star Kodi Smit-McPhee) for survival. His casting director Avy Kaufman had brought in Moretz, and Reeves was instantly impressed. “A lot of kids came in and tried to play this hundreds-year-old vampire, not a 12-year-old girl,” he notes. “Chloë was the first who really understood that she hasn’t been able to grow up and is still a kid in many ways.”

Reeves then placed a call to Vaughn. “Matthew couldn’t say enough about her,” Reeves reveals. “Not only about her ability as an actor but about her as a person. He told me how her family is so supportive and keep her grounded and lovely, which was very reassuring.” Reeves confesses he had trepidation about putting a young actor through such a complicated emotional role. But any fears he had were soon allayed by his star. “Chloë wanted to do it all, even her own stunts,” he reveals. “We did a scene where she was knocked down, and the first time, I was so worried for her. Then she jumped up laughing and said, ‘Let’s go again!’ “

Moretz admits it was hard at times playing “such a deep, dark character,” most notably in a scene where she had to cry—which she accomplished, she says, by thinking about her mother. But at the end of the day, she’s able to leave it all behind. “Oh, yeah, you have to,” she says, “because I love it so much, I love playing these people who are so different from me. It’s not real life; it’s entertainment.”

It’s something Moretz hopes to be doing for years to come, though if it doesn’t work out, she wouldn’t mind becoming a helicopter pilot. “I have a terrible fear of flying, so I feel if I’m in control of the helicopter, I might get over my fear,” she reasons, before adding with a laugh, “Or it might be more terrifying!” For the time being, she loves her career and is aware of how fortunate she has been to have so many opportunities. “We all have an imaginary checklist of things we want to accomplish,” she notes. “Working with Nicolas Cage—check. Playing a vampire—check. Playing an action hero—check. I’ve already checked off about 20 things on my list!”

Outtakes
- Performs the voice of Darby in “My Friends Tigger and Pooh” and voiced a character in the animated film “Bolt”
- Recently signed on to join the cast of “The Fields,” opposite Sam Worthington
- Had an arrangement with her family that for every film role she booked, she got a dog: “That had to end after my second movie.”
- Says the only time she has ever been starstruck was with Daniel Craig, who visited the “Kick-Ass” set

(via Backstage)


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Collider: Chloe Moretz & Chris Mintz-Plasse interview

Posted by Holli on 17 Apr 2010 / 15 Comments

If you haven’t seen Kick-Ass yet, you’re missing out on a gem of a film. Directed by Matthew Vaughn and starring Aaron Johnson, Clark Duke, Chloe Moretz, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Mark Strong and Nicolas Cage, the movie is about a high school kid who decides to dress up like a super hero and fight crime. But he has no special powers or real training. Needless to say, things don’t go as planned.

By now you’ve heard the deafening awesome buzz about Kick-Ass, so I say again…what are you waiting for? Go see it this weekend! Want another reason….read Matt’s review.

Anyway, at this year’s WonderCon, I got to talk with Chloe Moretz (Hit Girl) and Christopher Mintz-Plasse (Red Mist) about making the movie. While I tried to keep the interview serious and ask real questions…let’s just say they were more into having fun. You’ll see after the jump:

And for more Kick-Ass interviews, here’s screenwriter Jane Goldman and Aaron Johnson and Clark Duke. Also, last summer at Comic-Con, I was able to speak with Chloe Moretz and Christopher Mintz-Plasse before I knew about the movie. Watch the interviews by clicking their names.

Chloe Moretz and Christopher Mintz-Plasse

- I try to get them to be serious. Epic fail
- What’s the promotional process been like
- Did they think it was going to be such a good film when they got involved
- What scenes were they sad to see get cut out (deleted scenes talk)
- What do they geek out over
- Are they prepared for Comic-Con when people will be dressed up like Hit Girl and Red Mist
- Twitter talk

(via Collider)


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Meet ‘Kick-Ass’ breakout star Chloe Moretz

Posted by Holli on 17 Apr 2010 / 9 Comments

When you were 12 years old, what were you doing with your life? To most, it’s a time to play in the park, fantasize about cloud shapes, and watch a lot of “SpongeBob SquarePants.” To Chloe Moretz, the tween years are a good time to launch a Hollywood career — and kick some ass.

“Basically, Aaron Johnson plays Kick-Ass,” the “(500) Days of Summer” star explained to us while discussing her new movie that seems likely to make her a household name before she even has a driver’s license. “He’s a regular, everyday kid — a nerdy comic book fan, and he’s like, ‘Why doesn’t anyone ever try to be Batman? Just a normal guy turned hero?’ So he goes out, tries, and gets totally beaten up; he gets stabbed and then run over by a car. … That’s when Hit-Girl and Big Daddy come in.”

Moretz is Hit-Girl — the C-bomb-dropping, gun-toting tween who wages war against the mob alongside her Batman-obsessed daddy, played by Nicolas Cage. The first time you see the duo onscreen, Big Daddy is firing bullets into the little girl’s chest — and from there, things get violent.

“We show up at [Kick-Ass'] house, say, ‘We know about you,’ and he realizes we’re real vigilantes,” Moretz said of the plot, based on the beloved comic book of the same name. “I’ve been trained since I was a baby to be this crazy assassin girl. But what I like about the character is that she’s an assassin, but at the same time she is still just an 11-year-old girl. She doesn’t know any better; it’s just how she was raised.”

Count Roger Ebert among those who seem bothered by Hit-Girl’s ruthless nature and the jokes that often come from it. But according to Moretz, all that ass-kicking is part of the character, and nobody should get too hung up on it.

“It’s a movie; it’s not me,” she explained. “If I ever uttered one word that I said in ['Kick-Ass'], I would be grounded for years! I’d be stuck in my room until I was 20!

“I would never in a million years say [what Hit-Girl says in this film],” she laughed. “I’m an average, everyday girl; when I act with my friends, I’m totally immature. … I have to go to bed at 9:30. If I’m up late on the computer, I lose it for two months.”

This week, li’l Chloe is appearing all over the talk shows; she has recently signed on to “The Fields” with Sam Worthington and “The Invention of Hugo Cabret” for Martin Scorsese. Later this year, she’ll return in a controversial remake of the Swedish vampire classic “Let the Right One In,” and director Matt Reeves is already calling her performance “primal.” Couple all that with the fact that Hit-Girl seems likely to be this year’s hot Halloween costume, and you can see how a 13-year-old girl could get a big head — that is, if she was anyone other than Chloe Moretz.

“My mom and my dad, they keep me totally grounded,” she promised when she dropped by our studio with no entourage and only her parents in tow. “My mom has always said that if I get a big head, she’ll take me out of this business as quickly as I got into it.”

(via MTV)


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Q&A: Chloe Moretz, 13, cleans up her language for this interview

Posted by Holli on 17 Apr 2010 / 16 Comments

She’s young, but Chloe Moretz has been acting for almost half her life.

She’s had roles in films like “The Amityville Horror” and “Diary of a Wimpy Kid,” appeared in shows such as “Desperate Housewives” and provided the voice for Darby in the animated series “My Friends Tigger & Pooh.”

But it’s fair to say she’s never done anything like “Kick-Ass” before.

Probably no 13-year-old has. She plays Mindy Macready in director Matthew Vaughn’s film about would-be superheroes. As Nicolas Cage’s daughter, she’s taught how to use weapons, how to kill, how to curse, and she hesitates at none of the tasks. Her uttering of one word in particular is drawing controversy, a word we can’t even hint at here.

She talked about the role recently, about her dream roles and about how her family keeps her grounded.

Q: You’re going to get asked a lot about a girl your age playing a role with so much violence and profanity. What’s your response to those who criticize you?

A: It’s a movie. It’s not real life and it’s not supposed to be taken as real life. You sit down in a theater and you watch the movie. Any time I said anything it was in the script, it was part of the character. That’s why I did it.

Q: So you didn’t ad-lib the profanity.

A: (Laughs.) No, definitely not. No ad-lib for me. My mom would totally ground me for the rest of my life.

Q: You get to do action, but you also play some more-touching scenes with Nicolas Cage, who plays your father. Was that difficult, to switch gears?

A: It was fun, you know, because I have to show the difference between Hit-Girl and Mindy Macready. Which was hard, and that’s why I really wanted to do it.

Q: How do you manage to keep in touch with friends?

A: It’s easy. I see my friends almost every weekend. And even when I’m not in town I talk to them in iChat and video chat. It’s basically like seeing them every day.

Q: How do you choose your roles?

A: I have my brother who’s my acting coach, Trevor. And I have my mom who’s basically my manager. Without them and my family, I don’t know how I’d ever make a decision.

Q: What roles would you like to play as you get older?

A: ‘Gone with the Wind,’ I would love to do that. And maybe ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s.’ Those are my favorite movies, so doing that would be crazy.

Q: Do you always want to keep such a hectic pace?

A: When I’m not busy I actually get really, really bored. It’s funny, I’m like, ‘OK mom, I want to chill for, like, two days.’ One day in and I’m like, ‘I’m ready to go get my next project.’ So my mom is like, ‘OK, here we go again.’

(via LoHud)


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Chloe Moretz, 13, can kick your you-know-what

Posted by Holli on 14 Apr 2010 / 13 Comments

It can be tough discerning how old Chloe Moretz really is.

On paper, she’s 13, a native of Atlanta, the sibling of four older brothers.

In person, she’s composed and deliberate in her answers, although she remains a giggler and is prone to the word “breathtaking.”

On screen, all bets are off. The veteran of two dozen films and TV shows is quick with a butterfly knife and David Mamet-like vulgarity. She puts those skills on display in Kick-Ass, which opens Friday amid some concern over how far the movie pushed its young stars.

When it comes to controversy, Moretz is all teen. “Comic book movies had gotten too tame,” says Moretz, who was 11 when she shot Kick-Ass. “My mom read the script and thought it was great. And I wanted to do action.”

This action, though, includes having Nicolas Cage’s character blast his daughter in the chest to teach baby how to take a bullet (she’s wearing a vest). She prefers Glocks to Barbies and, in what would become the most controversial scene of the film, drops the king of vulgarities — a profane reference to female anatomy — on a group of ill-fated thugs.

“You know, her character wipes out just about everyone on screen, and that one word is where all the controversy is,” says director Matthew Vaughn (Layer Cake).

Even Vaughn, himself the parent of a 7-year-old boy, says he was a little taken aback when the scene began. “It’s a movie, of course, but I wouldn’t want my kid talking that way.”

The scene, which was one of the first of shooting, called for Moretz, playing Hit-Girl, to square off against a phalanx of criminals and say, “OK, you (epithet), let’s see what you got.”

“I figured, we’ll shoot it, and it’ll never get in,” Vaughn says. “But she jumped right into it, delivered it without any cobwebs. Just about every actor there froze, looked at me and said ‘What the (another epithet)?’ I knew we had something.”

What he had was a minor controversy as word swept through the business that an 11-year-old was swearing up a storm — and filmmakers planned to keep it.

“It was funny,” Vaughn says. “We’re killing all these people, and that’s the controversy.”

Still, the response could be anger or antipathy, at least at the box office, says Chad Hartigan of Exhibitor Relations. “These are still comic book movies, and kids are going to want to go. They’re marketing all these bright colors and happy music for an R-rated movie.”

Joe Drake, Lionsgate’s co-chief operating officer and president of the motion picture group, denies the studio is marketing to kids. “The world Matthew has created is brutal and real-world,” he says. “We set that up in the opening scene. That’s why people are responding so well to it.”

The hubbub is a mystery to Moretz, whose two biggest shows to date are a fitting dichotomy: Dirty Sexy Money and My Friends, Tigger & Pooh.

“I don’t see what the big deal of it was,” says Moretz, who swears she had never said the word before reading the script and has never used it privately.

“Just because I talk a way in a movie doesn’t mean I’d ever do it in real life. My friends don’t talk that way.”

It was that sweet-yet-seasoned demeanor that drew filmmakers to Moretz, who also appeared in Bolt, Diary of a Wimpy Kid and (500) Days of Summer.

Still, executives early on “wanted to turn Chloe 25,” says Mark Millar, author of the Kick-Ass comic book. “The point of this character is that she’s young. We decided to keep the layers out of it and do it ourselves.”

Moretz is grateful for the decision. She says the film helped not only with her knife work but also in dealing with high-energy adults on sets. It will come in handy: She’s expected to appear in Martin Scorsese’s family mystery The Invention of Hugo Cabret, due next year.

“People shouldn’t get so upset,” she says. “It’s all pretend. I still like slumber parties and popcorn fights.”

(via USA Today)

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