Posts Tagged ‘Sasha Grey’

Everhip Interviews Sasha Grey about “The Girlfriend Experience”

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

sasha-grey

Q:  How did you approach this role?

Sasha Grey:  I go into everything with a very serious approach and I asked Steven a lot of questions. Who reminded me to keep my personality and confidence in the film but at the same time I was playing a character, so it was a way to fuse those two things together. So I met him a year or a year-and-a-half before we started shooting, and I went home that day and got  on the internet and started researching escorts and escorting.  It’s actually hard to find information on the individual women in that world, and I thought about trying to hire one and interviewing them, but I felt weird so I never did.  Then about two weeks before we started shooting the film the casting director took Steven and I to different blogs written by escorts, so that really helped me a lot to get intto their daily lives, and how they feel about what they do, and their doing it anonymously…so they really write how they really feel.  And the day I got to New York,  the casting director introduced me to two real life GFE’s, so it really got me into that world with them, and we did three hour interviews with them for my character bio.  And Steven said yes to everything, but he encouraged me to keep that natural quality and approach to the film.  It’s also why there wasn’t a final script.

 

Q:  Did you work out back story for your character?

Grey:  When I got to the hotel that night, it was constant for me and it didn’t stop until the film ended.

 

Q:  Was this a natural progression for you into mainstream films?

Grey:  No I had legit experience from the time I was 12 to 18 but I strongly discourage anyone who says they want to get into adult films to do mainstream films (laughs), because no matter if you’re working in adult films or mainstream you have to be happy with that. It wasn’t something I planned on and it came together in an unorthodox way.

 

Q:  What is is like when Steven Soderbergh calls you and says I want to put you in my movie?

Grey:  I flipped out.  I ‘m a huge fan.  I said I’m never throwing this phone away.  So that was hilarious and I met him a few days later at Warner Brothers for 45 minutes and that was pretty much it.

 

Q:  So, you’re not looking to get out of the adult film industry?

Grey:  Not at the moment. I’m trying to do both at the same time. I think the climate’s right. Since day one of being in the adult industry I’ve been challenging stereotypes…“She’s abused, she’s on drugs, she has a pimp.”

 

Q:  So, you’re on a quest to find the perfect left-handed guitar (Grey is also a musician and music fan).  How’s that going?

Grey:  I just re-string. I do it old-school.  And it makes a different sound because the strings don’t fit perfectly when you play.

 

Q:  How is your own filmmaking going?

Grey:  In the past three weeks I’ve approached it in a more serious fashion. It’s less about when I get a free moment and more about creating the standard professional environment that I’m paid to make and the people I work with.  I have four movies in the can and when I get home next week I’ll be shooting my directorial debut.  It’s interesting, and I think for me it goes back to creativity and wanting to make an audience see more.

 

Q:  Do you see yourself incorporating your writing, music and filmmaking all as one? 

Grey:  Definitely I don’t set a boundary between anything I pride myself on and I’m passionate about.  And if I didn’t have passion, I wouldn’t want to live. 

I’m a no BS person, and women are afraid to stand up for themselves,and I had a great grandfather who said ” Don’t let anyone ever push you around just because you’re a girl”.  I’ve lived by that whether it be professionally or personally. I have a really cool fanbase, and my fans respect me.

 

Q:  Were you intimidated at all about having to improvise most of this movie?

Grey:  Yeah, we didn’t get the outline until the night before and that went hand in hand with what Steven wanted, with that natural quality and the unknown-feel to each scene we shot,  so yeah, looking at the outline and thinking, “Ok, how’s that exactly going to work out?”  but also asking questions non-stop without ruining Steven’s style of filmmaking.

 

Q:  Tell us more about your music?

Grey:  Atelecine.  It’s experimental in the truest sense in that it has no form or function.  It’s just when I get the time.  I never even intended to put out an album or a song…it was just material that I collected from 2005 to 2007 .  I decided that people might enjoy it, so we did a 300 copy limited edition and it sold out the first week.  Our next project is probably going to be with Dais, a small Brooklyn based label, and it’s going to be a 10-inch full-length album this time, and I know this is weird but like comparing it with my adult work and no boundaries, this world really truly has no boundaries.  It’s not something I care about selling, it’s not my main source of income, so it’s really just for me.

The Girlfriend Experience ” opens today. Enjoy the trailer below.

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Everhip Interviews Steven Soderbergh About “The Girlfriend Experience”

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

steven_soderbergh1

Q:  Let’s start with explaining what a “girlfriend experience” is.

Steven Soderbergh:  GFE is an acronym that describes a kind of escort that re-creates or duplicates the exact emotional and physical environment that you would have from having an actual girlfriend…meaning they know all about you, they’ve read everything you’ve read, they’ve seen the movies you’ve seen, they know what’s going on in your life, what’s going on with your family.  You can make out with them. It’s literally renting a relationship by the hour, and in that world there is a surcharge for that kind of intimacy. And that’s what was so interesting to me, that’s the most expensive time there is.  And you weren’t paying someone extra for something sexually that you couldn’t get anyone else to do, you were paying them this surcharge so they will convince you that you’re involved with them. That’s the fantasy…what would it be like to be her boyfriend.

 

Q:  Using real people on camera goes back to “Sex, Lies and Videotape”.  Is this something you were always interested in? I’m curious how this all developed? And were there any watershed moments, or was it organic?

Soderbergh:  No.  I saw “Sex Lies” at Sundance, I didn’t sit through it…I came in during the last ten minutes, and it was kind of hilarious to see. To think that 20 years ago what James Spader was doing could be outré and kind of scandalous, when the shit you can see now in a double click will like sear your brain, but I’ve seen stuff on the internet that I can’t un-see. It’s unimaginable, It was kind of quaint. It was like watching a movie that took place in the era of gas lamps. I was like “Wow, this was so innocent.” And then there was the hair. The 80’s hair.

I mean, I think I started to be interested in this idea probably around the time of “Skizopolis” actually because I was coming off the “Underneath,” which was a watershed movie in the sense that I really thought about quitting. I’d drifted so far off in a direction that I didn’t feel connected to, I thought how did this happen?  But anyway,  it was…it ended up being for me…I guess a piece that was entirely about artifice and form. There was something so extremely formal about it, I thought I gotta break myself of this. It ‘s not good for me   So “Skizopolis” is sort of an overreaction, but it was the beginning of…I cast my ex-wife as my wife and that sort of  started this idea of integrating real people into situations that they’d either experienced or had some real knowledge of.  And seeing where that would go.  I remember in “Erin (Brockovich)” we had a judge play himself.  And that was played by the judge who really handed down that ruling and I remember thinking, “Wow he’s good!”  He has a quality that’s really interesting. In “Traffic”, there are a lot of people playing themselves at the Mexican border, so I was really intrigued by this…I liked the energy they had.  And then, when I did the deal to make the films for 2929, and obviously ‘K Street,” which was an even more complex attempt to fuse more real people and real situations, what I drew from that was you can still feel the dividing line between people who are actors and people who are not actors.  But I still felt that there were two sort of universes colliding so I resolved that when we got the 2929 deal, to just move everything into this universe where they were all non actors and we’re working with a detailed sort of outline and scene breakdown, and bullet points about what the scene is about, but I’m going to hire real people and turn them loose. 

 

Q:  How long was the shoot?

Soderbergh:  Sixteen days.

 

Q:  For this film the locations play an important role…

Soderbergh:  It s funny you should mention that, because with the locations it was hard, and they were really important.  Because if you’re making a movie and it’s about transactions, money, and commerce, then you have to explore the fetishization of the environment and explore the space where people want to transact. So it was important for me to find places and shoot the exteriors of them and make you feel like, “that‘s where people go…that’s part of the fabric of this very specific slice of this city.” You know, by design this is a very myopic view of a very small cross-section of people who are doing a certain thing in October of 2008.  I also I like that in a movie, when you can see that specificity and you can say “I’ve walked right by that place.  I know that place.” or “I’ve eaten at Kraft, I think I sent something back.” 

 

Q:  Why did you cast Sasha for this?

Soderbergh:  I found out about her because I read this article in Los Angeles magazine by accident. I was on a dubbing stage in Los Angeles and I just picked the magazine up and was leafing through it and I saw this article about her, and I started reading it and I never really heard anybody in the porn industry talk this way about the industry, about themselves. She didn’t seem to hit the markers that people in that industry hit and I was surprised by that, and intrigued. She has a stable family, no history of abuse, no drugs, no alcohol and I just sort of filed that away.  And then in the spring of ‘06 is when we wrote the outline for this, it had been sitting in the drawer for awhile and as it got to the point of actually slotting it in and actually scheduling it, I contacted her representatives and said I want to sit down and talk with her about being in this movie.  I knew even if it wasn’t going to be explicit really, I wanted somebody who in sexualized situations feels totally in command, and powerful, and I feel like that‘s a tricky thing to fake.  And one of my favorite things she did, is the last scene in the movie with the jeweler. He’s getting undressed, she’s already undressed, and the way she looks relaxed and completely in-control. When I watched it I thought, “I don’t know how you fake that.”  I don’t know how to describe it, just totally Zen. Not in a hurry…that’s what I was looking for.  Someone completely in control, because that’s what the movie is about,…control.  The fact that her…what a lot of people might see as a problem…her affect, I felt was crucial to the core of the movie.  That disconnected quality, that people might say, “She seems really kind of flat,” I was like “Yup, exactly.”  She gets punctured by Glen Kenny, and in that moment of vulnerability she meets this other guy who seems to be different in feeling from her boyfriend, and she leaps into something she would never do.  And so in point-of-fact who Sasha is was absolutely central to this.  Imagine somebody else who is a more traditionally open and emotional normal person in that role…it doesn’t work the same way.  There’s no break point. It was important that you feel that she’s sort of closed.

 

Q:  Did you watch her films to research her?

Soderbergh:  There’s two sort of things that Sasha does. There’s the traditional porn and then there’s the gonzo stuff she does, very extreme stuff. And what I noticed about the extreme stuff was her awareness of the camera. The camera is like a character in the scene, it’s a threesome. Sometimes a ten-some, but she’s always aware of the lens.

 

Q:  Did you talk to Sasha about where she’s going in her career? Did she quiz you a lot about movies?

Soderbergh:  She’s seen a lot of movies.  She’s very close now to making her own films and I‘m really curious to see what’s going to come of that, because she’s in a world in which most of the people who make those films don’t have the kind of aspirations she has for herself.  So, I’m really curious to see what she comes up with.  She’s got this sort of magpie eclecticism, and I ‘m really curious to see what influences she pulls from.

“The Girlfriend Experience” opens today.

 

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Everhip “One Minute” Previews Five Summer Films You Need To Know About

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

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Everhip One Minute Video: Sasha Grey, Steven Soderbergh and “The Girlfriend Experience”

Friday, May 1st, 2009

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