Current:Home > InvestVicky Krieps on the feminist Western ‘The Dead Don’t Hurt’ and how she leaves behind past roles -Infinite Edge Learning
Vicky Krieps on the feminist Western ‘The Dead Don’t Hurt’ and how she leaves behind past roles
View
Date:2025-04-13 07:52:35
TORONTO (AP) — Vicky Krieps noticed that while there’s plenty of instruction for getting into a role, there’s curiously little about getting out of one.
For Krieps, the disarmingly natural Luxembourgish actor of “Phantom Thread,”“Corsage” and “Bergman Island,” it’s not a small issue. It may even be the most important part of the process. If she’s still stuck the headspace of a character, she can’t keep moving forward.
After struggling in the aftermath of her breakthrough in Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Phantom Thread,” in which she starred opposite Daniel Day-Lewis, Krieps found a solution. She could put a capstone on the character through music.
“I have to leave my characters in a peaceful way and say: Now she lives in song,” says Krieps.
Krieps, 39, has since followed every performance by writing a song for the character. She sings and plays acoustic guitar. She’s currently recording an album of those songs but she took a break to travel to the Toronto International Film Festival for the premiere of her latest film, “The Dead Don’t Hurt,” directed by Viggo Mortensen.
The film, Mortensen’s second and most accomplished directing effort, is a Western from a different, more feminist perspective. Mortensen plays a Danish immigrant named Holger who meets the French-Canadian Vivienne (Krieps) in San Francisco. They soon settle down in a corrupt Nevada town, but Holger is compelled to join the Union Army. Vivienne is left in their remote cabin, and is brutally raped while Holger is away.
Vivienne’s song, Krieps says, is sad and dark.
“It starts as a lullaby of a woman singing her child to sleep,” Krieps says, sipping tea in a hotel restaurant. “And it always breaks off when she says, ‘I can’t sleep. I can’t close my eyes.’ There’s the hope of him coming back. At the same time, this is something that’s been done to women over centuries.”
“The Dead Don’t Hurt,” one of the highlights among the films on sale in Toronto, received an interim agreement for promotion from the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Radio and Television Artists since it was an independent production and doesn’t yet have a distributor. Krieps is also to receive a tribute award at the festival.
The film is the latest in a naturally evolving project for Krieps of playing women throughout history who reject the social conventions of their times. In last year’s acclaimed “Corsage,” she played the much constricted, independently minded 19th century Austrian Empress Elisabeth. In the ’50s-set “Phantom Thread,” only her Alma is capable of countering a battle of wills with Day-Lewis’s fastidious couturier Reynolds Woodcock. In “The Dead Don’t Hurt,” Vivienne packs her bags to flee after the assault, then puts them down and resolves to stay.
“At one point you have to ask yourself: What are you living for? I do believe that something is changing for women and I’m part of this. I can tap into my grandmothers and great-grandmothers and also try to connect with who’s coming and who was before,” says Krieps. “I don’t really know why. I just know that’s how it feels. I think the dialogue is broken between men and women because women learned to hide the wound.”
Since 2017’s “Phantom Thread,” Krieps has emerged as one the movies’ most authentic, instinctive and defiant screen presences. It’s not an act, either. Krieps, who lives in Berlin with her partner and two children, is herself a force of stubborn independence.
She doesn’t like to rehearse. Every take she does differently. She’s willing, she says, to risk a scene being bad in order to make it real.
“And I believe inside: They can’t tell me what to do,” says Krieps, smiling. “I was working with Gabriel Garcia Bernal, and he was like, ‘I think this director really wants us to say the lines.’ And I said, ‘I don’t care. They cannot tell me what to do.’ And he looked at me rather impressed.
“For me, art is like a wild creature,” she adds. “To tame it, you pretend that you’re not seeing it. But, of course, I want it to come to me so badly.”
This rebellious streak in Krieps is clearly present in other parts of her life. She describes being resentful of a streaming service that, after she had played Hitchcock, would recommend only things like “Tomb Raider.”
“You’re trying to (expletive) influence me!” she says. “And by chance, it’s made by you as well. What a coincidence! That’s why the system is (expletive). It’s hiding good cinema.”
Krieps, a deeply anti-algorithm actor, has sensed that her progress in the film industry, too, could become its own construct. She has, she says, tried to work frequently with first or second-time directors. She’s turned down many more Hollywood offers than she’s accepted.
“If I get too comfortable, then I might be led into superficial things as well,” Krieps says. “As an actor, you could be easily led into some life that’s not your life. You start thinking of who you are as an actor. ‘Oh, I’m this guy,’ or ‘I’m this woman. That’s what they like me for.’ All this stuff and the gifts and the parties, the ‘I love you’ and ‘I love you too!’ It’s like foam. It goes up and up and then there’s nothing left that’s actually real.”
___
Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP
veryGood! (65892)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- 75,000 health care workers are set to go on strike. Here are the 5 states that could be impacted.
- Former Staples exec sentenced in Varsity Blues scheme, marking end of years-long case
- Pilot of small plane dies after crash in Alabama field
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Remains found by New Hampshire hunter in 1996 identified as man who left home to go for a walk and never returned
- A child sex abuse suspect kills himself after wounding marshals trying to arrest him, police say
- Navy to start randomly testing SEALs, special warfare troops for steroids
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Duane 'Keffe D' Davis indicted on murder charge for Tupac Shakur 1996 shooting
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Jessica Campbell, Kori Cheverie breaking barriers for female coaches in NHL
- On the brink of a government shutdown, the Senate tries to approve funding but it’s almost too late
- Hasan Minhaj and the limits of representation
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Allow Amal and George Clooney's Jaw-Dropping Looks to Inspire Your Next Date Night
- Italy and Libya resume commercial flights after 10-year hiatus, officials say
- Judges maintain bans on gender-affirming care for youth in Tennessee and Kentucky
Recommendation
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
New York stunned and swamped by record-breaking rainfall as more downpours are expected
Why arrest in Tupac Shakur's murder means so much to so many
Europe sweeps USA in Friday morning foursomes at 2023 Ryder Cup
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Rewatching 'Gilmore Girls' or 'The West Wing'? Here's what your comfort show says about you
Israeli soldiers kill a Palestinian man in West Bank, saying he threw explosives
Navy to start randomly testing SEALs, special warfare troops for steroids