Vanessa Ferlito plays "Arlene" in Quentin Tarantino's
"Death Proof", feature #2 in "Grindhouse"
MoviePulse: What did you get to watch
while screening films at Quentin Tarantino’s house for preparation
for Grindhouse, and how did they influence your performance?
Vanessa Ferlito: We watched so many! We watched
about 20-30 trailers, the original Friday the 13th, a Raquel Welch
“rollergirl” weird one and we watched Vanishing Point.
The script was very true to Quentin Tarantino. I think [Grindhouse
films] are more of a look as opposed to writing; it’s so
distinct, I felt I wanted to do the best job for the role. When
you think of Grindhouse movies you think of bad quality and bad
acting, so I don’t know if it applied as far as an acting
sense, but it was definitely a look.
MP: How did you get the role of Arlene?
VF: I met Quentin a couple of years ago shooting
“Man of the House” and we’ve been friends ever
since. He just called me one day and said he wrote the role for
me, and I didn’t believe him even though he’s a man
of his word. I thought he was kidding. He would check in month
to month and say “I’m going to send you the script”
and when it was time to shoot he said, “Are you ready to
go to work?”
MP: What does “Grindhouse”
mean to you if you were to explain it to someone who was unfamiliar
with the term?
VF: They were 60s and 70s exploitation movies
and they had theaters called grindhouses, where they would play
two movies for the price of one. They were low budget, had bad
acting, and they had crazy trailers in between. There were missing
reels, so it would jump to a totally different scene. It would
start in New York and travel to the west coast, and by the time
it got over there it wasn’t even a movie it was so cut up
because the projectionists would steal all the good parts…sex
scenes…nude scenes. I had no idea about it until I got the
part, and then we went over to Quentin’s house and he showed
us a bunch of grindhouse movies.
MP: Can you tell us a little bit about
your role?
VF: I think it’s very empowering to women,
when I read it, it was sort of refreshing because it’s very
rare in Hollywood right now. Most of the time it’s supporting
roles but I’m in the beginning part where we had no idea
we were being stalked or were prey. It was great to play a strong
woman and also be very vulnerable.
MP: As an actress, is it intimidating
at all to work with a director like Tarantino, known for being
meticulous with movies?
VF: Certainly at times, but for me no matter
how many people I work with, before every movie I always question
whether I can do this. I’m totally paranoid, but then you
work with someone like Quentin who’s a perfectionist, so
meticulous, so perceptive, he knows women in and out, and he can
tell me how I feel, or what to do. The energy around him is very
comfortable and he’s an actor as well so he can relate on
both levels. He tries to make it as comfortable as possible for
us. He’s very specific and he’ll tell you exactly
what he wants; he’s going to shoot it until he gets what
he wants.
MP: Were there any scenes that were
overly difficult or time consuming?
VF: No, actually. He’s very prepared.
One scene would turn into a much bigger scene because as we were
going along he’d decide that he wanted to add things or
switch something up. The whole crash scene was amazing. He has
a great crew behind him.
MP: Do you prefer working on television
or in feature films?
VF: I’ve done 3 or 4 TV shows (I was on
CSI for a year and 24). Even CSI compared to 24 was very different.
CSI is procedural and it’s the same thing every day. I was
doing movies before I got on CSI. I felt like I wasn’t ready
for that sort of life; after wrapping Shadowboxer, I’d had
a taste of the movie world and it was a little hard for me to
be on a show like that.
MP: What do you think Grindhouse will
do for the horror genre?
VF: There are people who try to fight Quentin’s
style, but this is very unique. It would be preposterous if a
person tried to make another Grindhouse film. Death Proof is not
really a horror movie; it’s scary because it’s real,
it’s like watching the news. I see stories like that all
the time. Horror films are just so big right now; every week there’s
a new horror film out. Robert and Quentin are paying tribute to
grindhouse films because they grew up watching them and love them
so much. You never know with the business; it’s fickle.
MP: Why do Tarantino and Rodriguez work
so well together?
VF: They both have a real love and passion for
movies and they go to the beat of their own drums. Nobody is their
boss, they do what they want to do and they take chances. They’re
so unique and come up with new ideas and run with it. They’re
very similar in a lot of ways.
MP: How did you approach acting in a
film style that is known for, or attempting to emulate, bad acting?
VF: It’s hard to act bad because his writing
is so good. You might get bits and pieces where you feel it’s
a little bit campy, but you can tell his dialogue from a mile
away. It’s more of a look, how things were grainy and cut
out. He’s such a good writer!
- Mike Massie
Six
Exclusive Grindhouse Interviews