The jury is still out on whether anyone wants four more “Avatar” movies, but four more Oona Chaplin movies is a much easier sell. Best known for a too-brief stint on HBO’s “Game of Thrones,” the actress who played Robb Stark’s betrothed Talisa comes from a long line of show-business royalty. Born in Madrid, Chaplin’s mother is actress Geraldine Chaplin, making Oona Charlie Chaplin’s granddaughter and Eugene O’Neill’s great-granddaughter; as if that weren’t enough of a pedigree, she’ll soon join another Hollywood legacy: James Cameron’s.
Chaplin is currently listed on IMDb as starring in all four “Avatar” sequels, two of which are in post-production and two of which are currently filming. Chaplin’s character is named Varanga, whom it’s safe to assume is a member of the Naʼvi. In a recent interview with IndieWire tied to her new film “Anchor and Hope,” Chaplin was tight-lipped on “Avatar 2” details, saying she was “very much sworn to secrecy.” She added: “And you know what? It’s so good, because it’s going to blow people away.”
Asked if Hollywood really needs another franchise, Chaplin was sympathetic. “Right? I mean, in a certain way I totally agree. But in a different way, and I don’t know how politically correct it is for me to say these things, but I feel like it’s Trojan-horse cinema,” she said.
“I feel like we have a culture now where we are, just the numbers show that these franchises are probably the most successful thing that people want to go and see in the movies,” she added. “So I feel like what James Cameron…is wanting to do is use the momentum of this fad, of this franchise kind of culture to explore things that he finds important…like our relationship with nature, our relationship with people, our relationship with ourselves and the spirit. He’s using that vehicle to tell the story that he’s passionate about.”
As IndieWire’s David Ehrlich argued earlier this month, you’d have to be insane to doubt James Cameron. According to Chaplin, the filmmaker connects with so many people because of how intimately he understands his audience.
“Jim knows his audience better than anyone,” said Chaplin. “And he knows story as well. The epic nature of these films is totally grandiose and really has the old Greek epic-ness about it. I feel like he uses the structure to explore the scene. And he’s so good at both, it’s kind of amazing.”
While the Oscar-winning “Titanic” and “Avatar” director is known for grandiose special effects, Chaplin said she was surprised how committed he was to finding the truth of the scene.
“I had no idea that it would be so truth-centric,” she said. “But the whole thing is about truth, because everything else is stripped away. Everything else he can put it in. Everything else. You want a dragon? He can put in a dragon. But the only thing that he can’t add is the emotional depth of what lies beyond the structure of your performance. The physical structure, the soul. And I feel like that’s what he wants to get.”
from indiewire