Friday, March 25, 2011

Water for Elephants

Robert Pattinson as Jacob Jankowski and Reese Witherspoon as Marlena Rosenbluth in "Water for Elephants." (David James / Twentieth Century Fox)

By Amy Kaufman, Los Angeles Times

January 16, 2011

On the last day of shooting "Water for Elephants," Reese Witherspoon was so upset that she broke down in tears. She hadn't been that saddened by a movie wrapping in years, the actress said, but she had become particularly attached to one costar: an 8,800-pound elephant named Tai.

"The day I had to say goodbye to her, I wept all day," Witherspoon admitted. "It was one of the most extraordinary filmmaking experiences of my life. You work with actors and directors, but to have this nonverbal complete relationship with an animal that we were all very connected to was very magical."

Based on a bestselling historical novel released in 2006, the film, due out April 22, centers on a former veterinary school student named Jacob ( Robert Pattinson), who falls for circus performer Marlena (Witherspoon). Because of the characters' shared affinity for the big top, both actors had to be comfortable interacting with a variety of animals — horses, camels, and, of course, elephants.

Before production began, director Francis Lawrence planned a meeting with the stars and Tai at the 10-acre Perris, Calif., elephant ranch where she lives.

"I'll be honest — I did use a trip down to see the elephants as a bit of bait for the actors," Lawrence joked.

It worked. Witherspoon felt so at ease with Tai that she quickly attempted an elaborate mount, in which the elephant lifted the actress with only its trunk.

"They had her pick me up, and I just screamed," she said. "She could crush you, but she knows the exact amount of pressure to put on you."

On set, though, some of the other animals made her jittery.

"There were a couple of really scary moments on the movie. A couple of zebras broke loose while we were shooting a scene and started bucking and kicking, and we all ran for cover," she recalled. "Camels bit people and spit at them. But the funny thing is that Tai was the most consistent: a calm, just easygoing presence. She was just this incredible spirit."

Interestingly, the elephant's owner, Gary Johnson, was reluctant to allow Tai to perform in the film because it includes scenes of animal abuse.

"We had really mixed emotions about even doing this film because it's pretty graphic with the elephant, and there's some so-called beating scenes in there. We didn't want to send a wrong message," said Johnson, the co-owner of Have Trunk Will Travel.

After speaking to the film's producers, Johnson came on board. Visual effects created the impression that Tai is being beaten in one scene; in another, fake wounds made from silicon were attached to the animal.

Johnson says he often encounters animal rights activists who don't think his elephants should be performing, but he believes Tai's participation in "Water for Elephants" will allow audiences to better understand the animals.

"You can feel the intelligence with them. They're so massive but yet they're so graceful," he said. "It's just something about them. I've done this for over 40 years now, and still one of my favorite things is at the end of the day being in the barn, just watching them eat, sitting on a bale of hay watching them interact with each other. It's just very relaxing."

Courtesy of Casey Gibbs

Fiction is defined as class of literature comprising works of imaginative narration, especially in prose form, something feigned, invented, or imagined; a made-up story, an imaginary thing or event, fable, fantasy, a story invented and fashioned either to entertain or to deceive.

Water for Elephants is a work of fiction. Intelligent society understands that as well as understands the how a work of fiction is defined. But there is a segment of society that never let's fact's get in the way of an agenda. They are called animal rights activist's. They are going to attempt to twist Water for Elephants an acknowledge work of fiction into a work of non fiction,
an account or representation of a subject which is presented as fact. This presentation may be accurate or not; that is, it can give either a true or a false account of the subject in question. Intelligent society will also understand that as well as understand the definition of fiction.

http://waterforelephantsfilm.com/

Link Courtesy of Donnie Anderson

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is that picture some sort of optical illusion? I would have thought an elephant would have been a little wider . . .

Bruce the Clown

Wade G. Burck said...

Bruce the Clown,
Of course it is an illusion, give the angle it was taken from. Look at how out of proportion the people are to each other. It looks like it was shot from the ground up.
Wade

klsdad said...

Movie is in wide-screen.

This photo is not in that
ratio.

klsdad