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LOS ANGELES - Christina Ricci is all grown up. In place
of the wide-eyed child from "Casper" and "The Addams Family,"
a young woman in a low-cut black slip dress sashays into
the room. With perfectly coiffed hair and full make-up,
the self-possessed 17-year-old discusses her first R-rated
film. "The Ice Storm" definitively answers the question
of whether Ricci can survive child stardom. "People would
always ask me about it, what do you think, do you think
you're going to survive and be an adult actress? Do you
think you'll make the transition?" she said. "I would always
just shove that away from my thinking, because I don't think
it's right to do every movie thinking about where it will
get you, to do a movie and think okay, this is going to
help my career, and this will help me be an adult actress.
I never thought about that. I have agents who think about
that, so I know that I don't need to really deal with that."
Her agents could not have picked a better role to segue
Ricci into the rigors of adulthood. In "The Ice Storm,"
Ricci plays Wendy, a sexually precocious 14-year-old. On
the edge between girlhood and womanhood, Wendy is discovering
sexuality in a spirit of innocent curiosity. Complicating
matters is the tense relationship between her parents, Ben
(Kevin Kline) and Elena Hood (Joan Allen) when Elena suspects
her husband is having an affair with sultry neighbor Janey
(Sigourney Weaver).
Although the adult themes of the film impressed Ricci, she
was nervous about her first sex scenes, in which she seduces
on-screen brothers Elijah Wood and Adam Hann-Byrd one after
the other. Since all three teenagers are underage, their
parents had to be present on the set.
"It's more intense when you watch it than doing it," she
said. "It didn't feel that tense. We were both kind of nervous,
just because it's awkward. You know, your mothers are there,
and we were doing this whole thing, and I'm showing my underwear.
My underwear -- it's a really big deal to show my underwear,
that can be harmful later on in life."
The emotional impact of "The Ice Storm" appealed to Ricci
from the moment she read the script. The screenplay by James
Schamus is based on the semi-autobiographical novel by Rick
Moody, about his parents' lives in the affluent suburb of
New Canaan, Connecticut. A dangerous ice storm serves as
a metaphor for the emotional numbness of the main characters,
struggling with the free-wheeling spirit of the 1970s.
"There's so much stuff in this movie that you never see
addressed," she said. "When I read the script, the thing
that I was struck by is there are feelings and emotions
that the younger characters go through involved with sex
and experimentation, and all that stuff, and shame, that
you never, that you can't even talk about to anyone."
Although the success of children's films like "That Darn
Cat" built her image as a star, Ricci said she no longer
is interested in acting in family films. At times, Ricci
seems a worldly sophisticate, at other moments a typical
high school girl.
"I don't think there's anything wrong with family films,
I don't think there's anything wrong with kids' films,"
she said. "Making movies for kids is not bad, I think the
kinds of movies they do make for kids are annoying, and
I wouldn't want to be in one of those movies ever again."
Her next films include "Opposite of Sex," where she stars
as a confused young woman who moves in with her gay half-brother
and seduces his lover. Written and directed by Don Roos,
the modern romantic comedy slated for release next year
also stars Lisa Kudrow and Lyle Lovett. She also co-stars
in the drama "Buffalo 66" with Vincent Gallo and Anjelica
Huston coming out later this year.
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