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It
seems ironic that Bridget Fonda is co-starring in the new
Jet Li actioner Kiss of the Dragon. Ironic, because the movie
was co-written and produced by Luc Besson, and the actress
appeared in the Hollywood remake of Besson's La Femme Nikita.
Fonda merely smiles at the suggestion, but is grateful that
this time around, she does very little butt-kicking.
Come wasted
"After I said that I'd do the movie, there was a call back
the next day, and I said, 'Am I supposed to be doing action?'
You have to tell me if I'm supposed to be getting into physical
shape like I did in Point of No Return. I trained for 6 weeks
to learn how to do the fighting for that. Just to get limber
enough not to pull every muscle in my body.
But Luc said, 'No, no, you just do all the running away.'
All I had to do was turn up and look out of it", she adds
laughingly, referring to her role as a junkie hooker in the
movie.
In Kiss of the Dragon, Jet Li plays Liu Jiuan, a mysterious
operative who travels from Shanghai to Paris on a mission
so sensitive, the details are unclear even to him. A few clues
lead Liu to Jean-Pierre Richard, a brutally corrupt cop. When
the mission goes horribly wrong, Liu falls into a deadly trap
and becomes embroiled in a vast conspiracy - accused of a
murder he didn't commit, on the run in a city he doesn't know.
When Liu is thrown together with an American woman forced
into prostitution, the unlikely duo goes up against the cunning
and ruthless adversary who set this trap in motion.
What
was the hook?
Fonda took the unusual step of agreeing to do Kiss of the
Dragon even prior to seeing a finished script and putting
herself in the hands of a first-time director.
"I looked at it as a chance to have an adventure", she explains.
"First of all, I really liked Jet Li and from everything I
know about him, people have said that he's the most decent
guy who he turned out to be, and what he wants to do, more
than anything, is to do good work that he can stand behind.
So I knew that we weren't going to have anything exploitative."
Then of course there's Luc Besson as an added attraction,
"who has his own style and is very strong and opinionated."
So Fonda felt that "any time you were going to take a chance
this it, so I signed on for the adventure."
An adventure which included not being cast as merely 'the
girl' in what is clearly a male genre. "I knew that wouldn't
happen in a Luc Besson movie. He loves women too much; there's
no way he could let her be just the girl. So what could easily
have been 'the girl' part gets woven more into the story.
Besides, I'd just stomp my feet until I got my own way, anyhow",
she laughs.
I did it My Way
Fonda has been 'stomping her feet' in Hollywood since her
starring role in 1989's acclaimed Scandal. Despite her famous
family, there was no added pressure for her to become actress,
but admits she "was pretty defiant as a kid, and everything
had to be my way.
In a strange way, I didn't think I was going to act until
I did a school play, liked it and I thought maybe I would
try." But there was no way the precocious youngster "would
take any advice on the subject, even if I needed it, especially
from my dad. So I was going to do it my way. And she
did.
"Looking back on it, I saved a lot of time insisting on seeing
what I had, instead of trying to skip a few steps along the
way."
Fonda has always had sense of defiance, "a tempest in a teapot"
as she puts it. "I really doubt that there'd be any stories
about me being such a nightmare. I think I've been spoiled
by having worked with people who I felt had earned their respect,
so I require it."
Potted
Fonda
Fonda has earned that respect over the years, appearing in
over 40 films, from the likes of Singles and Single White
Female, to Godfather 3, Mr Jealousy and Jackie Brown.
In the past 15 years, Fonda has established herself, within
the Hollywood community, as a committed, no-nonsense professional,
an actress first, celebrity second. She says she has been
able to avoid the more celebrityism aspects of her job, "because
I tend not to get harassed. I doubt that I'd handle it too
well if I were. Consciously or unconsciously, I don't tend
to court a lot of attention and try not to air my dirty laundry
in public; I'm not an exhibitionist in that way."
In the 15 years since Fonda first burst onto the screen, she
feels that her "viewpoint has changed a lot since then. Things
now are made much more by committee and so it's harder to
get out a more individualised piece of work and have it come
out remaining as quirky, or what have you."
Fonda admits that usually in this process "you get a script
which you think is really wild and then you get the next set
of re-writes and you go: Wow, this is blander. Then the when
you get the next set you go: I wonder if I'd taken this job
if I'd read this draft. Then you have you go back and
fight to get back some of the little things that made it special."
It's a tough act
Which is why, Fonda admits she doesn't work as much as she'd
like. Also, she says, for her, the business of acting in the
past decade and a half "has gotten harder, which I didn't
think would happen. I always thought that the longer you did
something the easier it would get, but the longer you do something,
the more you require of yourself, so as my ability heightens,
the bar raises as well."
But Fonda is not career-driven, she says, and just wants
to audiences to like what she does. "I'm just happy if they
get it. If I read something that I'm passionate about, I
want to share that passion with the rest of the world."
And that passion continues.
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