Joaquin Phoenix needed a break while recording audio for š eš„ scenes for Spike Jonze’s 2013 filmĀ Her, which Scarlett Johansson said was “one of the most challenging jobs that I’ve done”
According toĀ Scarlett Johansson,Ā Joaquin PhoenixĀ had a difficult time recording audio for their š eš„ scenes inĀ Spike Jonze’s 2013 filmĀ Her.
During Johansson’s appearance Monday on theĀ 500th episodeĀ ofĀ Dax Shepard’sĀ Armchair ExpertĀ podcast, the Academy Award nominee, 37, said that her costar had already filmed the entire movie before she replacedĀ Samantha MortonĀ in the voice role and scenes needed to be re-recorded.
She said that recording š eš„ scenes between the artificial intelligence Samantha, who falls in love with Phoenix’s Theodore Twombly, was “one of the most challenging jobs that I’ve done,” and recording sessions with Jonze, 52, proved uncomfortable for Phoenix, 47.
Johansson noted: “You definitely don’t want to hear what you sound like having a fake orgasm.”
“I remember we came in that day,” she said. “I’ve become that actor that’s like ‘let’s get dirty.’ I have to, because otherwise I’ll be petrified. Joaquin comes in, we try to get through one take and he was, like, losing it. He was like ‘I can’t do it.'”
“He was like angryā¦ he had already [filmed the scene], he had done it in person, and now he was with me in this weird theater and I’m in this box, and he was like staring at me, and the lights are low, and Spike is thereā¦ it was so bizarre,” Johansson continued.
“I was fine. Joaquin was not – he was so upset about it,” she added. “He left the studio, and now I’m in this box by myself and I’m like, ‘I can’t do it alone. I need him to come back.’ He needed a break; he took a break and he came back in.”
Despite the difficult recording sessions, Johansson, Jonze and Phoenix’s hard work paid off āĀ HerĀ made $48 million at the global box officeĀ against a $23 million budget and received oneĀ Academy AwardĀ for Best Screenplay at the 86th Oscars, along with four other nominations.
“I haven’t seen that movie in a long time but I bet if I watched it I would be so mortified,” Johansson said. “It’s tough.”Johansson, Shepard and co-host Monica Padman also had a candid conversation aboutĀ Johansson’s early days as an actressĀ during herĀ Armchair ExpertĀ appearance.
TheĀ Black WidowĀ star admitted during the episode that she spent a lot of time around adults as a child, which she attributed to her Manhattan upbringing and career and said that she “definitely was in different situations that were not age-appropriate.”
“Luckily my mom was really good about protecting me from a lot of that stuff, but she can’t do that for everything,” Johansson told the pair.
Johansson said that this perceived maturity went hand-in-hand with her being “hyper-š eš„ualized” as a young actress, despite saying that š eš„ was “never a huge part of my actual personality.”
“Because I think everybody thought I was older and I’d been [acting] for a long time and then I got kind of pigeonholed into this weird hyper-š eš„ualized thing,” Johansson said. “It was like, that’s the kind of career you have. These are the roles you’ve played and I was like, ‘This is it, I guess.'”
Shepard and Johansson also acknowledged that this “hyper-š eš„ualized” pigeonhole in Hollywood has an early expiration date for women.
“The runway is not long on that and so it was scary at that time,” theĀ Marriage StoryĀ actress recalled. “And I attributed a lot of that to the fact that people thought I was much, much older than I was.”
Source: https://people.com