When it comes to action films, the one person
who is always ready play a different part is Milla Jovovich. When
you look at her film background, which includes The Fifth Element;
The Messenger: The Story of Joan Arc, and most recently the two
Resident Evil films, she participated in the action sequences
with full force. Now she’s back for more action and more fun with
a different role in “Ultraviolet”. Set in the late 21st century,
an infected woman with vampire-like disease (Hemophagia), giving
her enhanced speed, incredible stamina and acute intelligence-
Ultraviolet (Jovovich), finds herself protecting a nine-year-old
boy who has been marked for death by the human government as he
is believed to be a threat to humans. Recently, at the 2006 New
York Comic-Con festival, Jovovich spoke to blackfilm.com, amongst
other journalists, about getting a charge at playing these high-octane
action characters like Ultraviolet which is a far cry from when
she was a kid and getting bullied on by bigger kids.
Do you even enjoy coming to these conventions
and things like that?
Millia Jovovich: Listen. It’s awesome to
see a bunch of people that love to go watch action movies and
comics. I was a huge comic fan when I was little; well these people
are not little, but I can relate in some sense. This is the audience
for “Ultraviolet” so I want to support the movie and I want to
make sure that people go see it and get to know me.
How did Kurt approach you and how did you
get involved in the first place? Had you seen “Equilibrium”?
MJ: I had seen “Equilibrium” in the middle
of “Brother” the year before and the director actually wrote “Ultraviolet”
for me. He called me and was like, “I have this script that I
wrote for you and would you read it”; and I read it and I was
really touched by it in a lot of different ways just because it’s
this story about this woman trying to protect this little boy,
and essentially on top of that she’s like the craziest action
hero ever. I love it.
How different is it working with Kurt doing
action movies as opposed to Paul W.S Anderson?
MJ: Kurt is really funny. Of course it was
crazy to work with someone that actually practices martial arts
themselves, so a lot of stuff he would understand. In a lot of
action films you definitely have the director and the stunt coordinator
are like totally different people, but in some sense Kurt was
always like one step ahead of everybody when it came to the action
stuff and he had such a vision for it, so it was interesting.
I definitely ruffled his feathers a few times. I gave him a black
eye. So, you know, I wouldn’t let him get away too perfect.
What were some of the ultra-unique things
that the director did to help you bring out that ultra-violentness?
MJ: Well, we had an ultra-amazing stunt coordinator
named Mike Smith, who was really, really had incredible vision.
He really wanted to give this feeling of an Eastern-type martial
arts movie, which in western action films you really just don’t
have that kind of fluid floral type of wooshu. Usually, it’s very
street fighting. It’s very like hard punches and it’s all about
the violence. This is much more about the look, the movement;
it’s so much about what she’s doing and not just about the punches.
So, it’s taking it to another level, which I’d never done before
and I was really excited because I was scared because I kinda
have two left feet sometimes and in this movie I had to so much
crazy stuff especially the sword tricks and the wooshu; it’s very
balletic. Like I said up there (in the podium) you have to be
very graceful so I’m a little nervous about that. I can throw
a punch but man, when it comes to gracefulness I definitely kinda
bottom of the list for that; so I had to work a lot. I didn’t
get everything right that why I ended up working a year ahead
of time.
Is it difficult to know when you are going
to do a move….
MJ: I wish the people that are like you know,
“Why wasn’t it as good as the first one?” Well, why don’t you
start directing? (Laughs) What’s up man! Just write a script and
give it to me. Let’s see what you can do.
When you are ready to do a move, do you ever
have to say, "I think I have done something like that before,
can we change it up?" Do you ever have to do that with people
like Paul (W.S Anderson)?
MJ: You know what, with RE2, yes. I definitely
had a lot of things to say, you know, the whole running down like
the building wouldn’t had been there if I hadn’t pushed people
to like go, “Ok, let’s do something crazy and something we hadn’t
seen before” because Alice is just going to end up kinda doing
the same stuff like before. But I have to say with Violet it was
just from top to bottom different and if I did recognize something,
“Oh my God”, one thing I had to do through all of this and at
least that part I know. So, it was actually a relief when I did
something familiar because it was so much new information that
I had to take in and like I said, it’s like a dance form. There
was so much work I had to do in my own time, just after a six
hour stunt rehearsal I would spend three hours just spinning my
swords at the hotel room. Like destroyed my hotel room in China.
They hated me over there. I was like knocking on my ceiling cause
I was flipping swords and the lights go out, and I’m like, “Okay.
Hello. Room Service.”
When you’re doing like this with the guncoda,
which is sort of a made up martial arts kind of thing and sort
of like a new thing, do you get to bring in your own moves? Do
you get to go on the set and say, “I was playing around last night
and I think this would really look awesome?”
MJ: It’s funny that you should mention that
because they were a couple of times that I felt like, “You know
what, I would really love to do this kind of movement as opposed
to this kind of movement”, but to be perfectly honest with you,
Mike has the most insane fantasy world going on. To be frank,
I just wanted to learn what he taught me and survive. Anything
new at that point, I was like, “Stop” cause literally, we’re working
and he goes, “Listen. Forget everything that I taught you. This
is what we’re going to do” and I’m like, “Mike, listen. I can’t”.
He’s like, “You can do it man. I wouldn’t do this to you if you
couldn’t” and he’s like the total valley guy like fitness dude.
So he looks like a boxer but then he could like do ballet. Wow!
That’s kinda weird, man. You’re kinda freaking me out now. But
it was very, very complicated. The whole movie was incredibly
complex when it came to the fighting stuff because we have it
spread out and we have to shoot in sort of place that make it
financially viable for the company, so we literally had to practice
the whole way through the shoot because one, the stunt rehearsals
were on the last day, so with one of our main fight sequences,
we’re shooting on the last week. I had to work throughout the
whole 6 ? months of filming to get to that one scene at the end
and that was all the way through.
As a result of doing this martial art training,
have you gotten into Eastern philosophy and have you applied it
to anything you do?
MJ: It’s so funny because I’m a big fan of
New Scientist, and Scientific American magazines and I was reading
this genius article the other day on age. It was really funny
because finally western science is having to find explanations
for religion and why did we need religion and why millions of
years ago when people were first standing up, why did they create
religion, because obviously if they didn’t need it, we would have
thrown it by the wayside. Evolution, if we didn’t need wings obviously,
so we don’t have them; but we did religion for some reason and
they have actually proven that meditators live longer, happier,
and healthier lives than non-meditators. They have less health
problems and actually when you think it, all of the neurological
diseases where your brain breaks down like Alzheimers for instance,
the amount of white brain mass that we have inside of heads actually
shrinks as we get older and we all know that, but meditators at
80 years old have a brain mass equivalent to a person in their
20s. This is New Scientist, one of the biggest science magazines
in England giving you three articles about this issue and the
fact that you always see born again Christians and like they are
unnervingly happy, like “Wow, I’m just like inspired”. But it’s
true. When they do the brain scan, they see that the right hemisphere
is actually lighting up in places that atheists don’t light up
in, so literally, you have endorsements rushing in, especially
when you go to church and you believe. The endorsements that rush
through your head is so off the hook that you get happier off
course. It’s not about if God exists or not, but does religion
work, it sure does, and it’s so hilarious because it really is
becoming a scientific fact. If you pray for someone in secret,
it’s not going to work, but if you go, “I’m going to pray for
you and my family’s going to pray for you, and you believe that,
the light that is going on in your brain is going to help you
heal; and now they are literally saying that people who have family
members praying for them in hospitals get out quicker. I mean,
it’s insane with what’s going on because for a long time eastern
philosophy was totally put to metaphysics, like you can’t be a
physician talking about beliefs. You’re not going to try to quantize
faith. It doesn’t matter about God, but what belief does to you
as a person is limitless, so yes, I do try and practice eastern
philosophy.
MJ: You know what’s funny. I was so not a
violent child. I liked “Sheera”, Princess of Power right, she
was kind of violent. But I more like girly violent. I would be
fighting the dark forces, I didn’t fight, but I never got nailed
for not fighting. Never ever. When I would get picked on in school,
I would stand up and take it, and people would scare me sometimes.
I’ve been beaten up before, but by girls much bigger than me but
I hold my ground and I cried a lot.
MJ: I would imagine probably from “The Fifth
Element”. That was the first time I got challenged in that way
to have to train so much to have to discipline myself so it was
kind of what opened up the idea that I can do martial arts. I
found that my father was a huge fan of Kung Fu theater and stuff
and boxing, so I’ve always had a masculine side to myself, but
I always thought that was cool in the movies. I never really thought
that I would do it myself, and after “The Fifth Element”, I just
fell in love with martial arts and learning more, and wanting
to keep myself in a good physical condition so that I could learn
more and potentially do more movies where I could work with such
incredible people.
Are you to jump from this to Resident Evil
3? What’s next?
MJ: Well, I have my clothing line, Jovovich
Hawk, which I’m working on overtime, and no I won’t have a chance
to do anything before Resident Evil at this point.
How’s your character different in the third
installment?
MJ: Wait a minute.
I don’t think I need to answer Resident Evil 3 questions yet because
the movie’s not out at all and not made yet, so let me play that
character first and then tell you what’s different about them
because right now, I have no clue. I can’t even think about it.
The music stuff I love to play. I love to sing. I love to write.