December 6, 2024

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Cate Blanchett and Charles Dance lead an ensemble cast as the fictional German Chancellor and POTUS in Evan Johnson, Galen Johnson and Guy Maddin’s political satire, Rumours. They tell Hollywood Authentic about night shoots, AI fears, outlawing pineapples and tall poppy syndrome.

What happens when the seven leaders of the richest democracies in the world walk into the woods together…? Sounds like the start of a joke, and in the hands of trifecta writer-directors Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson it is. An absurdist satire that follows the fortunes of the world leaders at a G7 summit when their staff suddenly disappear leaving them defenseless and vulnerable, Rumours takes in masturbating bogmen, AI ChatBots, a giant brain the size of a car and woodland trysts as the group tries to reach civilization. It was a Cannes Festival hit earlier this summer and Hollywood Authentic sat down to chat with the actors at the heart of the film: meet German Chancellor Hilda Ortmann (Cate Blanchett), American president Edison Wolcott (Charles Dance), British PM Cardosa Dewindt (Nikki Amuka-Bird), Canadian Prime Minister Maxime Laplace (Roy Dupuis), PM of Italy Sylvain Broulez (Denis Ménochet) and Italy’s leader Antonio Lamorte (Rolando Ravello)…

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

What was it like shooting for 23 nights in the woods?

Cate Blanchett: Honestly, when Guy approached me about this, I thought we’d be shooting in Winnipeg and I’d be in his lounge room, or in some sort of mocked-up soundstage. And all of a sudden, we were in a forest in Budapest doing five weeks of nights. It wasn’t what I expected. I’d never done that many night shoots back to back. But there’s something kind of magical about it because you are on a time that only we understand. You wake up at 2 in the afternoon. 

Nikki Amuka-Bird: We definitely understand what it’s like to overcome your fatigue, and the characters are kind of delirious. We were getting more and more delirious as it goes on. It was very useful in that way.

Delirious is how you might describe the movie itself…

Charles Dance: It’s not a Marvel picture. Guy Maddin really is an arthouse director but this is not purely an arthouse film.

Nikki Amuka-Bird: I find it quite hard to express, in a linear way, what the story is about. I start with the G7, and then say: from there, it goes on to become this enormous, surreal, endless nightmare. What’s so great with Guy and the boys is that they’re not afraid to play with genre. It’s a bit horror, it’s a bit satire, it’s a bit zombie movie. It defies expectations.

It’s apocalyptic – do you think that’s the movie we need right now when we’re talking world politics?

Denis Ménochet: Not really. There’s a lot of good things in the world still. There are good people I know, and good things. I don’t want to think like that because otherwise you don’t enjoy yourself. No?

Nikki Amuka-Bird: I’m embarrassed to say that I’m an eternal optimist. Yeah, there’s a lot to be afraid of at the moment. It seems like an omni-crisis. But I do have this kind of faith in humanity at the end of the day to somehow turn itself around. I think that’s what we’re looking at in the movie. What if you’re only left with that fear and confusion? How does that evolve, and where does that end up?

Cate Blanchett: Yeah, and what happens when all of the signifiers of your life, and your position, and your relationships drop away? And then suddenly you’re in a gazebo, and you don’t know how long you’ve been there. It’s a bit like A Midsummer Night’s Dream. They’ve suddenly all gone. It just suddenly changes, and you’re in this altered state.  Look, I think somehow, now, the setting and the atmosphere and the tone and the image that they finally look out on seems much more possible than it did 15 years ago. It’s important to look at those things head on. But sometimes if you talk about them in a head-on way, you lose an audience. How do you use the collective anxiety and despair that any thinking person – apart from Denis – is feeling? But also invite an audience to laugh at it, and feel like they could go out slightly refreshed and more purposeful? And if it makes them talk about those things, I think it’s fantastic. It did feel more and more like a documentary.

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

Are you an eternal optimist like Nikki is?

Cate Blanchett: I think I’m probably an optimistic pessimist. You know, plan for the worst, hope for the best. I don’t like making fun of the state of the world. I love the world. I don’t think what we’re doing to the planet is at all amusing. I don’t think systemic, fiscal inequality is at all amusing. But you can satirise it, and invite people to see it and talk about it. That’s what I love about cinema. It asks you to engage in the world of someone else’s invention, and to imagine a way into different storylines. It’s expansive as an audience member, and I certainly find that as an actor.

Charles Dance: I despair with politics, really. The worst thing that happened, of course, was that [Britain] decided to leave the European Union. It was one of the most depressing days in the history of my country. But I didn’t look at this script politically, actually, at all. For me I thought this was a cross between Luis Buñuel and an episode of Monty Python’s Flying Circus. And I’m a fan of both of those things. It’s why I wanted to do it. 

Rolando Ravello: For me, I think that an actor or a director or a screenwriter has the possibility to come up with a way of thinking for people. For me, it’s an occasion to speak with other people – only speak without judgement. To only speak to reflect. This is important for me.

Cate Blanchett: I feel like this is as much a comedy or a satire or a tragedy as it is an episode of Scooby Doo. I’ve never seen the current state of affairs played out with that particular tone.  It’s a zombie movie and it’s a Mexican soap opera. And that’s what I was so interested and curious to see what an audience would make of it, because we were discovering the tone as we made it. Guy [Maddin] has always had a unique perspective that’s really playful and wicked and naughty, but also soulful and yearning and so full of self-reflection. It’s almost like a parallel reality that is able to speak, in a way, more truthfully to the environment that we sit in because he’s been so outside of mainstream cinema. If you haven’t seen The Green Fog, I highly recommend it. It’s astonishing.

Roy Dupuis: I had worked with Guy before, and he gave me the two most extraordinary shooting days of my career. It was like being a kid, and doing some sketches in my basement. This shoot was completely different. It was a big production, and very well-written. But there’s one aspect of the movie that kind of gets my interest. It’s the fact the world is changing very quickly, because of – mostly – AI. We hear a lot about it. I’ve been aware of that for the last 10 years, and that’s one aspect that I found interesting.

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

Does AI worry you?

Cate Blanchett: I don’t think we’re going to ever replicate the truly human, because we’re mortal, and that’s what gives us all our activators and all of our understanding and struggle with the world in which we live. That’s why all those middle-aged billionaires are trying to go to Mars, because they’re not confronting the fact that they too shall die, and AI doesn’t have that knowledge. It could replicate a synthetic understanding of that, but it doesn’t have it. I think it’s a huge threat. I was really grateful to the actors’ strike for many reasons, but for bringing that AI conversation into the mainstream. This touches on it, but it’s not a film about AI. But people might step out of the cinema talking about it.

Charles Dance: There were so many extraordinary advances in the last hundred years, far more than there’s been in the last thousand years. Suddenly, we as a species, we’ve yet to learn the law of cause and effect. We think, ‘Yes, we can do this. We can do this. We can do this’. Every now and again, somebody says, ‘Yeah, but what if we do?’ You know? I think that  question that needs to be asked very, very loudly with AI, because it’s incredibly powerful. 

Roy Dupuis: I personally think it’s going replace a lot of jobs, but making movies with real people is going to become precious, also. But I think it will happen. It’s really hard to stop.

Charles Dance: Years ago, I voiced a character in a cartoon. There was a comic in England called the Eagle, and one of the strips in it was a space thing. I went in to voice one of these characters. As I was going in, Albert Finney – bless him – was coming out. He saw me, and he said, ‘The writing’s on the wall, kid’. 

What was it like working with three directors?

Denis Ménochet: It was like a little lab behind the video village. When you asked a question, they would talk about it a little, and then come back to you. It was really amazing with three directors. And Guy Maddin’s sense of humour and dryness is amazing.

Charles Dance: There’s different kinds of directors who try to put performances in, and there’s directors who try to bring performances out. I prefer to work with the latter, but it depends on how good they are. The film industry is not populated completely with wonderful directors. There are some who don’t know their arse from a hole in the ground, in the same way there are actors who really don’t know what they’re doing. But these three managed to create an environment in which we were encouraged to contribute, which is a very healthy way of working. 

Nikki Amuka-Bird: It felt like you could speak to any one of them – you could ask any one of them any question, any time, and they’ve got an answer for you, and they know how to connect with each other. So it was really easy.

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

How did you find your characters, did you base them on anyone?

Cate Blanchett: There’s so few examples of female leadership but there’s certain signifiers for what represents a powerful woman in politics. There’s an iconography to it, and the gestures, and the way the men use it, and the way women have to use those male gestures. You can just see them being coached. They’re so separated from themselves, and the more they live a public life and speak in public, their voice changes. So there was a construct and an artificiality to them as human beings, in a way that I felt that the further they went along, the more human they became. I think we as citizens of our various countries are culpable for creating leaders as part of our societal ID. 

Charles Dance: We purposely didn’t push it in any direction. I guess if somebody sees a parallel in that with me and Joe Biden, then fine. OK. But that wasn’t in my head at the time.

Roy Dupuis: I looked at the archive videos that Guy and Galen and Evan sent us, just to see the body language.

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

What laws would you pass if you took on the role for real?

Cate Blanchett: No pineapple. There’d be no pineapple in Germany. I would outlaw pineapple. I don’t know!

What do you think world leaders will think if they see the film?

Cate Blanchett: I think any leader worth their weight in salt has a sense of humour about themselves. When you lose your sense of humour about yourself and your position…

Did playing these roles make you think about the corruption of power?

Denis Ménochet: It’s very isolating to have too much power, because then you change, and then you have no discernment, and everyone will say yes to you. I think it’s a lonely thing to have power. That’s how I feel.

Cate Blanchett: I think with power, we build people up. We build people up to tear them down. We’ve done that for millennia. I think it’s not only that you might change, but people might change in the way they deal with you.

How do you deal with being built up?

Cate Blanchett: My very first time in Cannes, I was in a very small Australian film in the marketplace, and I literally had bruises on my ribs from being elbowed out of the way to get to whatever movie star was there. And then I was back two years later with a film, being walked down with basically gladiatorial horses, and watching these other people being elbowed. It was so surreal.

Does that experience keep you humble?Cate Blanchett: It tells you how the whole thing is a hall of mirrors. It’s so weird. We are really a weird species. And I think that’s what Guy and Evan and Galen are leaning to – it’s the human insanity.

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

Rumours is in cinemas now



October 25, 2024

cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours

DISPATCH: RUMOURS
Words by JANE CROWTHER
Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS


Surreal political satire Rumours premiered at the Cannes Film Festival before travelling to TIFF and various festivals before landing in the UK’s capital this month at the BFI London Film Festival for a party hosted at Lasdun by Universal Pictures. Written and co-directed by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson, it follows the seven leaders of the world’s wealthiest democracies at the annual G7 summit, where they attempt to draft a provisional statement regarding a global crisis. But as night falls and their staff disappear the leaders discover their own fallibility and lack of agency – unless it’s a quick romp in the woods. The cast is as international as the characters: Cate Blanchett plays the German Chancellor, Charles Dance is POTUS (with an English accent, because – why not?), Nikki Amuka-Bird essays the UK PM and Alicia Vikander is the President of the European Commission who finds something mindbending in the mist…

Blanchett, Dance, Amula-Bird and their directors celebrated the UK bow of the film at a party attended by friends and colleagues. Greg Williams captured the fun…

cate blanchett, charles dance, rumours
cate blanchett, charles dance, evan johnson, galen johnson, guy maddin, nikki amuka-bird, rumours, philipp kreuzer
cate blanchett, guy maddin, rumours

Rumours is released on 6 December



September 8, 2024

alfonso cuarón, kodi smit-mcphee, disclaimer
hollywood authentic, venice dispatch, venice film festival, greg williams
alfonso cuarón, kodi smit-mcphee, disclaimer

DISPATCH: KODI SMIT-MCPHEE DISCLAIMER
Words by JANE CROWTHER
Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS


‘I should have stayed in my seat,’ Kodi Smit-Mcphee smiles when he recalls premiering Alfonso Cuarón’s new Apple+ limited series Disclaimer on the Venice Film Festival red carpet directly before the premiere of Maria, in which he also stars. In Disclaimer, based on Renee Knight‘s 2015 bestseller, Cate Blanchett plays an award-winning documentary filmmaker, Catherine Ravenscroft, who’s past comes back to haunt her when she receives a novel in the post. Told via three different perspectives and two different time periods, Smit-Mcphee plays the  directionless son she shares with Sasha Baron Cohen. In Pablo Larrain’s biopic of Maria Callas starring Angelina Jolie, he appears as the personification of her sedative medication who manifests as a TV reporter questioning her in the week of her life. ‘’I’m literally named Mandrax, which is this suppressant kind of medication that she takes. It’s these therapeutic conversations that she’s ultimately having with her subconscious – but with me,’ he tells Hollywood Authentic when we sit down overlooking the Grand Canal in the St Regis Hotel. Both projects gave him the opportunity to work closely with powerhouse actors in Blanchett and Jolie. ‘It was great in the sense of just how generous and giving and safe and comforting these women are. I really feel like both took me under their wing, and made me feel welcomed and good. And a couple of Angelina’s sons were also on set. So I hung out with them quite a bit. They were really beautiful as well.’

alfonso cuarón, kodi smit-mcphee, disclaimer

Venice hosted two red carpets for the premiere of the seven-part Disclaimer – the cast photographed on both occasions by Greg Williams – and for Smit-Mcphee coming to Venice gave the actor the chance to spend time with co-stars he didn’t meet during filming as their characters’ timelines didn’t cross on-screen. He and Leila Geroge, who plays the younger Catherine, and Louis Partridge – who essays a young man who has a life-changing impact on her – compared notes on filming as Smit-Mcphee spent six months filming on sets in London (and adopting an English accent) while George and Partridge filmed for seven weeks in Italy. 

For George the role required the actor to play two very different versions of the character as well as perform key explicit scenes with Partridge. The part required her to go to some dark place. ‘I use music quite a lot for when I have to shift into another place emotionally. Different playlists for different things, and that just immediately triggers something for me,’ she says. And the intimate scenes were an additional challenge. ‘It’s really important, of course, to have an intimacy coordinator so that everyone feels that there’s someone that they can go to, and feel safe. So there’s that side of it – the technical side of it. The other side of it is just getting to know [Partridge], and feeling safe with the person as a friend. We had so much time in Italy before we did those scenes. We’d go to each other’s trailers before we’d do something like that, and be like, ‘How are you feeling about the day?’ Communication and check-ins. And then just being able to let it go. Just leave it behind.’

leila george, disclaimer
leila george, disclaimer

‘It was kind of like a dance. It was all rehearsed,’ Partridge agrees. ‘And so, in some ways, it was more helpful to be in your own space, and occasionally checking in. Because we knew what we were about to do. And then, at the end of the day, we’d have a little dance, and shake it all off.’

Smit-Phee laughs that he enjoyed digging into playing a ‘grubby, homebody kind of teen’ as Blanchett and Baron Cohen’s son. As for working with Blanchett as his mum, he says: ‘Cate makes you question your abilities in the best way because she can go from this beautiful, light-hearted, joking fun in between takes. But then when she needs to go into something dark and heavier, it’s almost as if there’s a switch. But of course, there’s not a switch. It’s a great deal of work she does to develop these characters and get into these moments. But, my God, it looks like magic.’

The resulting work in Disclaimer is ‘so powerful’ and will prompt important conversation, says Partridge. He’s just completed work on Noah Baumbach’s new film and is currently filming Guinness, the story of the stout dynasty, playing Edward Guinness. ‘It’s brilliant, I’m loving it,’ he enthuses. ‘Do I get a lifetime’s supply of Guinness now? It wasn’t in my contract. That was a mistake, perhaps…’

alfonso cuarón, louis partridge, disclaimer
alfonso cuarón, louis partridge, disclaimer
alfonso cuarón, louis partridge, disclaimer

Disclaimer premieres on Apple TV+ on 11 October
Read our review of Disclaimer here

August 30, 2024

cate blanchett, leila george, sasha baron cohen, kodi smit-mcphee, louis partridge, alfonso cuarón

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Alfonso Cuarón’s dark seven-part thriller exploring victim blaming, the madonna/whore complex and the toxicity of trauma gives audiences a warning straight off the bat that they should question what they see. As feted documentarian Catherine Ravenscroft (Cate Blanchett) receives another award to add to her collection, the host of the ceremony touches on narrative and form and warns that they can be used for manipulation. Narrative and form are certainly used to skewed and smart effect in this elegant adap of Renée Knight’s 2015 bestseller as three stories are interwoven across decades. 

cate blanchett, leila george, sasha baron cohen, kodi smit-mcphee, louis partridge, alfonso cuarón

In one strand we follow Catherine Ravenscroft as she receives a parcel from an unknown source containing a book that seems to unravel carefully held secrets from her past. The story at the heart of the novel sends her spiralling, impacting her marriage to stuffy lawyer Robert (Sasha Baron Cohen) and estranging her even more from her 25-year-old wastrel son, Nick (Kodi Smit-McPhee). Meanwhile Stephen Brigstocke (Kevin Kline pulling off a perfect befuddled Englishman in the vein of Jim Broadbent) is mourning the loss of his son two decades previously, as well as his wife Nancy (Lesley Manville) more recently. Bereft, Stephen has nothing to live for but embittered revenge. And in a third story, horny inter-railing teen Jonathan (Louis Partridge) can’t keep his eyes off a beautiful young mother (Leila George) on an Italian beach. Grief, betrayal and brutality are bound for all the characters – but the how and why is disquietingly spun across the episodes to a gut-punch denouement that will make audiences question their own assumptions, gender bias and acceptance of narrative. The truth at the heart of this bleak tale is something that is lost repeatedly in the retelling of it, depending on who is crafting the story and what information (or lack of it) they are working with.

cate blanchett, leila george, sasha baron cohen, kodi smit-mcphee, louis partridge, alfonso cuarón
cate blanchett, leila george, sasha baron cohen, kodi smit-mcphee, louis partridge, alfonso cuarón

It would be churlish to provide any more narrative detail – the pleasure really is in the unpackaging of it – but this onion-layered story of perspective is delivered beautifully by Cuarón as writer/director, and his cast. Blanchett is a known powerhouse but she is immense here; by turns frantic, self-absorbed, rageful and ultimately incandescent as a woman being judged. George as a younger version of Catherine is a revelation in a star-making turn as both a vamp and a victim. She and Partridge generate serious heat in explicit scenes that cleverly make viewers complicit in judgement, while Kline and Manville create a blindsiding and heartbreaking portrait of grief that is hard to see past. Each of their narratives twist and turn to a barnstorming final episode that will likely prompt audience introspection about personal and public perception, society and social media’s hurry to punish without due diligence and the way we castigate women for being sexual beings. Knowing what we know at the end might also inform repeat viewing to understand the clues that were there for us to see – if only we weren’t so blinkered. A masterful binge watch that asks pertinent and uncomfortable questions.


Words by JANE CROWTHER
Disclaimer premieres on Apple TV+ on 11 October

In 2020, Cate Blanchett and I sat in the back of a car at a locked-down Venice Film Festival – where she was president of the jury – and discussed the idea I had for a magazine. She suggested a shoot with her chickens and I imagined what that would look like on the cover of Hollywood Authentic.

It was 2022 when we published our first issue; Sean Penn kindly agreed to be on our cover. Since then, I’ve continued to imagine that shoot with Cate and her chickens. Six months ago, my wife Daisy designed a gown inspired by Lauren Bacall in The Big Sleep for our fledgling Hollywood Authentic clothing range. We knew who we wanted to see in it and announced to the team that our dream was that Cate would wear it in a pair of muddy wellies holding a chicken in her potting shed. We got on with manifesting it. Fast forward to a serendipitous encounter at Glastonbury and hey presto…

greg williams, andrew upton, cate blanchett, glastonbury, hollywood authentic
Greg Williams and Andrew Upton by Cate Blanchett

This issue represents another example of artists showing their generosity in inviting me into their lives to show an unseen side of themselves. Generosity and motion is what links all our subjects in this issue; they’re driving kid’s electric jeeps (Cate), vintage tractors (Josh Hartnett) and Ferrari race cars (Nicholas Hoult) while talking about what propels their passions and careers. 

For this issue we also invited more collaborators into the Hollywood Authentic family. I met portrait photographer Charlie Clift at BAFTA a couple of years back and was immediately impressed by his work – he captures Lennie James for “a little nonsense”. We’re also thrilled to have Stephen Merchant guest-write his love letter to a Hollywood classic, Double Indemnity. Our now regular contributors are back: Gary Oldman and Gisele Schmidt write about the work of legendary Hollywood photographer Sam Shaw, Abbie Cornish gives us a review of Toronto Mexican restaurant Quetzal and Arianne Philips interviews veteran costume designer Albert Wolsky. Mark Read is also back turning his masterful lens to the Marin County Civic Center.

We’ve come full circle from that chat in Venice 2020 as we bring this issue to Venice 2024. I can’t wait to see what we take to the floating city in years to come…

greg williams signature

Greg Williams, Founder, Hollywood Authentic

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

August 28, 2024

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

Photographs and interview by GREG WILLIAMS
As told to JANE CROWTHER


Cate Blanchett loves her chickens. Today, she is gently hypnotising one in her potting shed. She’s never done it before but is following instruction on the art by director and friend John Hillcoat. Cate is stroking her feathered friend and gently guiding its vision from its beak to her gloved finger as she sits on a doorstep dressed in muddy wellies, a black silk gown and leather gloves. The chicken relaxes as she soothes and is soon so chilled that she can carefully place the bird on its side, where it lays motionless. ‘I’ve fucking done it!’ Cate whispers in astonishment. 

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

It’s hardly surprising that Cate can achieve such a feat. She has been an incredible artist since I first met her on Elizabeth when we were both at the relative start of our careers in film. Since then, she has taken on historical royalty, real-life war reporters, narcissistic conductors, intergalactic baddies, Middle-earth elves, Old Hollywood stars and iconic folk musicians in her three-decade career, during which we’ve collaborated many times. A performer open to experience and hungry to explore, Cate is always creative – whether that’s being playful in Piazza Navona on set of The Talented Mr Ripley, jumping in a bath in LA to pretend to use the showerhead as a telephone, donning her face mask to execute a perfect silhouette (and make a statement) in Covid-times Venice, or agreeing to stand on a Roosevelt Hotel fire escape just before the Oscars where she was nominated for Tár to capture the best light – and losing an unimaginably expensive borrowed diamond earring in the process, which was recovered five flights down. My heart was in my mouth for the minutes it took to find it! Twenty-seven years on, we bumped into each other at Glastonbury, where Cate generously invited me to her chicken shed to shoot our cover.

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

After finishing shooting Black Bag with Steven Soderbergh, she is about to set sail to promote her latest role as a space renegade in game-turned-movie actioner Borderlands, as well as her autumn Apple+ TV series, Disclaimer. Directed by Alfonso Cuarón, it features her as a documentarian who finds the tables turned on her and will premiere at the Venice Film Festival. Then there’s Rumours, in which she plays a fictional German chancellor at a G7 meeting that goes weirdly awry in the woods. It’s a typically varied slate that shows Cate’s appetite for exploration, but right now she has found time to play in the vegetable  garden. She leads me into the rambling back yard – the chicken has shaken itself off and pottered away back home to the chicken coop labelled ‘Cluckingham Palace’ that it shares with six other chickens. Cate is hoping for baby chicks soon from two broody birds snuggled in their nests. 

Deep in the garden, in a tangle of trees and verdant plants, are a set of active hives that provide lavender-flavoured honey. ‘We’ve always wanted to have bees,’ Cate says as she swaps her silks for protective wear to inspect the apoid workers. ‘We’ve had bee bricks in the city, for orphan bees or solo bees. But the idea of having hives… I’ve become obsessed because about 20 years ago on the cover of Time magazine, there was genuine full-on panic about how pesticides were killing off the bee population, and the enormous knock-on effect of that. It was an exploration of how fragile bees are as an insect species, and as the major pollinators they are, how deeply we rely on them. It really activated me, environmentally – and engendered big-sky thinking. The change in the taste of the honey reflects the change of their environments. It’s fascinating.’

As she carefully peers inside the hive, she tells me how she lost a colony to hornets last year, so had to invest in paper imitation wasp nests to hang in the trees. I ask her if it’s hard to leave the garden when she has to go away to work for months at a time. ‘Don’t you think, when you’re away, it helps to have a “dreaming” place?’ she asks. ‘A point of physical connection?’ She considers the question as someone who travels extensively for work. ‘Is it hard to leave the weeds?’ she jokes. ‘Actually, can I say: weeding is deeply therapeutic. My grandmother, who lived with us, and helped raise us after my father died, was an avid gardener but hated weeding. So she hired a gardener. His name was Mr Crutchett and he used to sing these beautiful songs, and just sit on his rear end, all day, pulling weeds in our garden. I think he was serenading my gran who he had a crush on. And he was the happiest man I’ve ever met. You don’t have to make headway in the garden – I humble myself and say, you know, “One weed at a time”.’

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams
black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

The fact that I even got the chance to make a film was extraordinary to me. I never expected to leave the shores of home to play the Queen of England

We leave the woody dell and Cate is driving a tractor as we discuss our first meeting, on set of Elizabeth, a star-making role that gave her her first Oscar nomination. ‘If I knew it was going to be a big moment, I would have collapsed under the weight of the pressure,’ she recalls. ‘I kept saying Judi Dench, Flora Robson, Glenda Jackson – I mean, what can I possibly add to the conversation? And the fact it was Shekhar Kapur – a director from Bollywood, and I was from the Antipodes; from the colonies – only exacerbated my hubris. These two outliers were looking at Elizabethan history, which is a period where so much of the English dream time comes from. Who did I think I was? The chutzpah. I think the only way I coped was the fact that I thought: “This is both the beginning and the end of my career.” I honestly thought, “This is it, so I may as well enjoy it.”  I think that was the moment where I learned to flip terror and anxiety to excitement. They’re very similar energetic forces. People often ask “What would be the advice you’d give to your younger self?” I’m always really reticent to give people advice because mistakes are so important, and I’ve certainly made a lot of them.’ She pauses for a moment. ‘But honestly, as one gets older, the advice is think quicker. Do it quicker.’ Quicker? I ask. I imagined she’d say slower. ‘No,’ she says. ‘Live more slowly, think more quickly. Don’t overthink.’

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams
black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

I’m always really reticent to give people advice because mistakes are so important, you know? And I made a lot of them

Who did she look up to as inspirations back then as she tried to build her career in what she describes as a sort of ‘survival mode’? ‘I grew up in this incredible golden age of Australian cinema. We had Jack Thompson, Judy Davis, Mel Gibson, Bruce Beresford, Peter Weir, Gillian Armstrong and then Nicole Kidman went and forged a career, which was extraordinary, in America. But I was never that girl. So the fact that I even got the chance to make a film was miraculous. I never expected to leave the shores of home to play the Queen of England.’ It wasn’t the end of her career, obviously.

As she amassed more work in the likes of The Talented Mr Ripley, The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Veronica Guerin and The Aviator, Cate admits : ‘You hone your instincts, and you learn to trust them. There are times when one doesn’t trust – I mean, the times when things have gone a bit cattywampus are the times when I’ve not trusted my instincts.’ Cattywampus? Does she really use that word? ‘You don’t use that word? Everything’s akimbo. All screwed up. Back to front. I am sure it’s in the dictionary.’ She laughs. ‘Surely Hollywood Authentic is cattywampus?!’

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams
black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

We walk to a nearby swing hanging from a tree and as she twists the rope and allows it to unfurl, she spins as we discuss inspiration. I have a preoccupation with ideas and the notion of where they come from, and I naturally want to hear Cate’s take on it. ‘It’s elusive and it never comes from the same source. If it came from the same place, creative flow would be easy, wouldn’t it?’ she says. ‘Inspiration, for me, arises from unexpected places. Sometimes it’s a snippet of conversation, a snatch of someone else’s conversation that you overhear, or sitting in cold water, or actually tuning in to the sounds immediately around you or the music of others… And I think probably a lot of the time it comes in that – and I hate this word because it’s so overused – liminal space between wakefulness and sleep. You know, that glorious moment just as you’re waking, and coming into consciousness. Hopefully it’s not in a gutter, it’s in your own bed!’

Inspiration also comes from being open to receiving, she says. ‘I’ve had experiences on stage where there’s energy coming from the audience, and from the other actors, and from the text – there’s something that just erupts out of this intersection, that none of you can name, and you don’t quite know how it came or what it means and it’s absolutely thrilling. I think it’s probably the feeling that people get when they bungee jump. You intellectually know the sequence of events, but, once you’re in the middle of it, it’s happening to you, and through you, and you just have to flow with it. I’m deeply uncool. I can’t surf, and I can’t play pool. But I imagine if you hit the ball in that spot, or you catch the wave, it’s similar to being on stage. You can rehearse and prepare for this but if you take flight it’s a collective experience that is about connecting to the present moment with radical openness. It’s not something you can ever plan your way into.’

The hoping for such lightning to strike must be something of a rollercoaster. Cate nods. ‘I think it’s why a lot of people who live creative lives develop a superstitious relationship to the work: “Well, this time, the muse won’t visit me. It won’t happen unless I do x, y and z to control the conditions.” For me, personally, it’s important to have a life in parallel that’s as rich as the work, and totally antithetical to the work. I’m not living my life to work. I try not to think about where ideas come from. You only think about where they come from when they’re not coming. And that’s why it’s always better to work with people who are far more interesting than you are, and more skilled than you are.’

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

I’ve had experiences on stage where there’s energy coming from the audience, and from the other actors, and from the text – there’s something that just erupts out of this intersection, that none of you can name, and you don’t quite know how it came or what it means, and it’s absolutely thrilling

Cate has collaborated with numerous skilled artists during her career – from Martin Scorsese, Anthony Minghella, Jim Jarmusch and Peter Jackson to Sally Potter, Gillian Armstrong, Wes Anderson and Todd Haynes. Does she ever look back at her work? ‘I think it’s challenging working in a very concrete medium where the object remains – fixed, static, finite. If you’re a plastic artist, or you work in film, there’s an object; a product that can be held, and it’s finite. But the experience is not finite. It slips through your fingers, and you have to let it go. So I don’t revisit those objects because it’s not useful. It’s like the memory of a moment or the memory of a song over time. The memory of anything can become more powerful than the thing itself.’

Those sorts of memories are produced nightly in the theatre, she says. ‘The audience warms this circle with you, and they produce, for that moment, this miniature zeitgeist – and then it’s gone. Increasingly I am drawn to those more ephemeral artforms that don’t leave a “product”, but they leave some sort of ephemeral residue between people.’

The characters and projects she inhabits leave their mark on her too – she admits that she doesn’t feel she ever leaves a character fully behind. ‘It’s like those conversations that are late-night, and protracted, and somewhere they lodge deep within you, in a way that you can’t necessarily consciously recall them. It’s like all the relationships or friendships or encounters, positive or negative, that you’ve had – they will come back to you in some way. They will keep returning to you. You view the world through the prism of the conversation – the creative conversation that you’re engaged with. So you’ll hear words. You’ll hear phrases. You’ll see gestures. You’ll hear music that all connects to the project. That leaves you. That obsessive thing leaves you. But the residue – the glorious unfolding residue – of it, never leaves you. I am eternally grateful for that.

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams
black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

‘It’s like reading a really, really terrific book,’ she explains. ‘You’re inside. You’re with the novelist. The author locking arms with you, going on a long walk. I don’t know about you, but when I get to the end of such a book, and I realise there’s only three pages to go, I have a bittersweet melancholy as every word, every phrase – you are inching closer to the end of something. But that story doesn’t ever leave you. But you try and recall the book – in all of its particulars, in all the order it happens… for me, it becomes a jumble. What seems so linear and clear when you’re in the middle of it creatively – you can put all the pieces together – it shatters and fragments. And if you try and put it back together, and replicate it, you know, to do the metaphorical sequel – it’s a disaster.’ She smiles. ‘You’ve got to say, “This is fragmentary, and I’ll remember it as I do, or not. Maybe I’ll forget…”’ 

black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams
black bag, borderlands, cate blanchett, disclaimer, hollywood authentic, greg williams

Borderlands is in cinemas now. Disclaimer premieres at the Venice Film Festival and hits Apple TV+ in the autumn. Rumours is in cinemas later this year. Black Bag follows in early 2025

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

August 9, 2024

Ariana Greenblatt, Borderlands, Cate Blanchett, Edgar Ramírez, Eli Roth, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Hart

Words by JAMES MOTTRAM


From Queen Elizabeth I to Bob Dylan in his electric era to The Lord of the Rings’ ethereal Galadriel, two-time Oscar-winner Cate Blanchett can do no wrong. And so she proves again in Eli Roth’s Borderlands, a rambunctious adaptation of the popular videogame series from Gearbox Software.

It’s not often that the chameleon-like Australian star graces blockbusters, although she was glorious as a Russian villain in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and Hela in Marvel movie Thor: Ragnarok. Here, guns at the ready, she’s Lilith, the red-haired anti-heroine at the heart of this madcap sci-fi that owes a lot of its energy to another MCU title, Guardians of the Galaxy.

Ariana Greenblatt, Borderlands, Cate Blanchett, Edgar Ramírez, Eli Roth, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Hart

Set in a decaying futuristic far-away world, Lilith is a lone wolf bounty hunter who gets hired by Atlas (Édgar Ramírez), the head of a sophisticated weapons company, to find his daughter. Affectionately known as Tiny Tina (Barbie’s Ariana Greenblatt), this girl has been kidnapped by one of his own men, Roland (Kevin Hart).

After a little arm-twisting, Lilith jets off to the dilapidated Pandora, a planet she knows from her own murky past, where she soon locates her target. Trouble is, Tina doesn’t want to go home – what with her father desperate to use her to help locate something only known as The Vault.

With Lilith, Tina and Roland joining forces, they’re accompanied by a robot named Claptrap (voiced by Jack Black) and the musclebound Krieg (Creed II’s Florian Muneanu), as they progress through Pandora. Much in the way a gamer might pick their way through levels, there are keys to collect and puzzles to solve.

Director Roth (Hostel, Thanksgiving) and his team do a fine job of recreating Pandora in all its grimness, a planet that is over-populated by marauding psychos and creatures known as Threshers. There’s even an appearance by Jamie Lee Curtis as a scientist who lends a helping hand, as this ragtag group look to survive this hot toxic mess.

Along the way, there are some exhilarating action scenes – not least one race through Pandora’s rocky roads that puts a new definition on the phrase ‘monster truck’. Intriguingly, comic star Hart plays it straight as the hardcore action hero, something he pulls off with aplomb, while Greenblatt has a field day as the explosive, dynamite-chucking Tiny Tina. Best of all, Blanchett is on fire as Lilith – yet another killer role to add to her considerable collection.

Ariana Greenblatt, Borderlands, Cate Blanchett, Edgar Ramírez, Eli Roth, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Hart

Borderlands is in cinemas now

hollywood authentic, cannes dispatch, cannes film festival, greg williams, hollywood authentic
cate blanchett, aswan reid, the new boy, cannes film festival, cannes dispatch, hollywood authentic, greg williams

CANNES DISPATCH 4
Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS


Cate Blanchett is in Cannes for the world premiere of The New Boy, from Caméra d’Or winning director Warwick Thornton (Samson and Delilah), in which she stars and also serves as a producer under her production company, Dirty Films.

The film is inspired by Thornton’s own experience of growing up as an Aboriginal boy in a Christian boarding school. Set in rural South Australia in the 1940s, the story centres around a 9-year-old Aboriginal orphan boy (Aswan Reid) who catches the attention of Sister Eileen (Blanchett), who with fellow nun (Deborah Mailman), take an interest in the unusual boy and the mysterious occurrences as he arrives.

Cate Blanchett is joined by cast members Aswan Reid, Deborah Mailman, Wayne Blair and director Warwick Thornton, moments before they attended the film’s world premiere at the 76th Cannes Film Festival.

cate blanchett, aswan reid, the new boy, cannes film festival, cannes dispatch, hollywood authentic, greg williams

Cate Blanchett in Louis Vuitton by Nicolas Ghesquière, styled by Elizabeth Stewart, make-up by Mary Greenwell and hair by Nicola Clarke. And Aswan Reid in Louis Vuitton

October 13, 2022

colin farrell, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography

Highlights from this year’s Cannes and Venice Film Festivals. 

walter hill, willem dafoe, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Walter Hill and Willem Dafoe at the Venice Film Festival
baz luhrmann, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Baz Luhrmann at the Cannes Film Festival
penelope cruz, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Penélope Cruz at the Venice Film Festival
lea seydoux, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Léa Seydoux at the Cannes Film Festival
cate blanchett, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Cate Blanchett at the Venice Film Festival
viola davis, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Viola Davis at the Cannes Film Festival
maude apatow, sydney sweeney, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Maude Apatow and Sydney Sweeney at the Venice Film Festival
austin butler, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Austin Butler at the Cannes Film Festival
simone ashley, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Simone Ashley at the Venice Film Festival
kate winslet, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Kate Winslet at the Cannes Film Festival
jodie turner smith, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Jodie Turner-Smith at the Venice Film Festival
julia roberts, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Julia Roberts at the Cannes Film Festival
idris elba, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Idris Elba at the Cannes Film Festival
brendan fraser, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Brendan Fraser at the Venice Film Festival
olivia dejonge, cannes, cannes film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Olivia DeJonge at the Cannes Film Festival
florence pugh, venice film festival, hollywood authentic, greg williams, greg williams photography
Florence Pugh at the Venice Film Festival