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Elizabeth Olsen

March 10, 2012 by · Comments Off on Elizabeth Olsen 

Elizabeth Olsen, One year ago Elizabeth Olsen stepped out of the shadows of her famous sisters, Mary-Kate and Ashley, to star in the title role of the drama Martha Marcy May Marlene, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and earned her critical acclaim.

But the actress appeared in two films at Sundance last year, and it is only now that the second, the thriller Silent House, has finally landed in theatres. It opened on Friday.

Last year, Olsen was a littleknown acting curiosity in a lowbudget art house film who was following in the footsteps of her famous twin sisters. Now, she’s a bona fide star in her own right, having earned best actress nominations from the Independent Spirit Awards and Critics Choice Movie Awards, and Silent House is her move into the mainstream horror genre.

The film is a re-imagining of the Uruguayan movie La Casa Muda, and it follows a young woman (Olsen) and her horrifying ordeal over the course of one evening in her family’s longneglected summer home. The 23 year-old sat down with Reuters to talk about it and her year of living in Hollywood’s spotlight.

Q: In Silent House, you spend pretty much the entire movie crying and running scared, going up and down stairs and in and out of rooms. That must have been exhausting!

A: It was! There is so much snot in this movie because that’s what happens when I get emotional – snot comes before tears. I gave myself a sinus infection by the end of the movie. It was hard.

Q: The story unfolds in real time and is told in a continuous camera shot. What kind of challenges did that bring?

A: We would shoot one 12-minute take but if at the 11th minute, something went wrong, everything you did up until that point didn’t matter. It was hard as an actor to know that you couldn’t use any of that material. It’s heartbreaking. But you deal with it and try to be present in what’s happening next.

Q: Having done two serious films back to back, did you feel like you just wanted to do a comedy next?

A: I did feel that way and I did do a comedy, Liberal Arts. It was at Sundance this year. I played this quirky, witty, intelligent student who falls in love with a guy too old for her. It’s funny and sweet, and I was so happy to get to do that. I really wanted to just laugh.

Q: A year ago at Sundance your career launched when Martha Marcy May Marlene and Silent House both made their debuts. Martha was released theatrically last fall and some felt you were overlooked for an Oscar nomination.

A: Isn’t that cool people were like, “Why wasn’t she nominated?” I just can’t believe my name and that word is in the same sentence. And I can’t believe I was at the Independent Spirit Awards and at the Critics Choice Awards. The fact that I get to choose jobs right now is ridiculous! Q: With award shows and new projects, what’s life been like for you this past year?

A: After filming Liberal Arts, I went straight to summer school and then from there, I went straight to fall semester. I had a two-week break in between to relax. I’m very determined to get my degree and I have two academic classes left. School determines how you live your life when you’re my age.”

when you’re my age.” Q: You’re getting a theatre degree at New York University. Why get it when you’re already working in your field?

working in your field? A: When I was a kid, I knew I wanted to be an actor. My sisters (child actors on the TV sitcom Full House) were always working non-stop and they were very happy. I saw them work, but I wanted to play. When I got to high school, I started to develop this complex thinking, “If I’m going to be an actor, no one’s going to take me seriously so I’m going to overcompensate and do as much training as possible so that I know that I have something no one can take away from me.”

Elizabeth Olsen House

March 9, 2012 by · Comments Off on Elizabeth Olsen House 

Elizabeth Olsen House, After filming wrapped on her debut feature “Martha Marcy May Marlene,” the intense psychological drama in which Elizabeth Olsen played a mentally-disturbed fugitive from a bizarre cult, the actress could have opted for a little R&R to recoup. Instead, three weeks later, Olsen jumped into her next starring role as Sarah, the distraught heroine of “Silent House,” about a young woman trapped inside a creepy mansion where strange things are afoot.

“I was just thankful that someone was offering me another movie,” says Olsen, who turned 23 in February. “But it turned out to be a lot harder than I expected. It’s very difficult to create a character arc and not repeat any beats in a movie where things just keep getting worse and worse for an hour and a half.”

Like the 2010 Uruguayan chiller that inspired it, “Silent House” unfolds in real time and seems to have been filmed in one single uninterrupted take. But Olsen confides the movie is actually comprised of 13 shots, cleverly edited together so you can’t see the seams.

“The hardest one of all the takes was the seventh,” she says. “It starts with me running up from the basement, out of the house, down the street, into a car and then back into the house. It took us several days to get that one right.”

Olsen has already completed three more films due for release in 2012, appearing opposite the likes of Robert DeNiro, Zac Efron and Jane Fonda. At the end of March, she begins work on “Kill Your Darlings,” the story of a murder that involved Beat generation poets Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs.

“I play Edie Parker, and even though I’m in only four scenes, I’ve been doing so much research on her that I feel like we’re making her autobiography,” Olsen says. “The script by John Krokidas is just incredible, and the cast (which includes Daniel Radcliffe, Ben Foster, Jack Huston and Michael C. Hall) is just incredible. It’s going to be a really cool film.”

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