Charlie Heaton’s ride from ‘Stranger Things’ to Shut In.
Charlie Heaton (Stephen) is a young
British actor who captured Hollywood’s attention with his performance in
Candida Brady’s Urban & the Shed Crew, alongside Richard Armitage, Anna
Friel and Neil Morrissey. He currently stars on the popular Netflix series
“Stranger Things,” opposite David Harbour and Winona Ryder.
Heaton lensed his role of SHUT IN’s
Stephen before STRANGER THINGS, and the movie marks his first co-leading role
after supporting turns in British features and TV. In the opening scene,
Stephen and his father get into an auto accident that kills his dad and leaves
the teen unable to move or speak, requiring constant care from his stepmother,
child psychologist Mary Portman (Watts). The two live in a remote New England
house, and after one of Mary’s young patients (Jacob Tremblay of ROOM and
BEFORE I WAKE) mysteriously disappears.'
Since
this was your first major movie part, was there a moment when you were going
through the script (by Christina Hodson) and thought, “Oh, man, all I do is sit
in a wheelchair or lie in a bed!”?
Well… [Laughs] No, that
was kind of comforting, in a way! I remember reading the screenplay for the
first time in LA; I was there for pilot season, doing three or four other
things at the time. This script was sent to me, and I started reading it, and
it was a page-turner; I just wanted to find out what was going on, because I
really couldn’t predict what was going to happen. So I wasn’t distressed about
that element at all.
How difficult was it to
play a character who is immobile for much of the film?
It was actually quite fun to
come to set and be told, “OK, today, Charlie, you’re just going to be lying in
the bed all day.” But actually, staying still was a challenge. I watched a lot
of videos about people in vegetative states; there’s a thing called Locked-in
Syndrome, which is where you’re awake but trapped in your own body. There’s a
French movie about that, THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY, and that was one I
saw. I spent a lot of time in my trailer trying to relax my face and loosen my
lips and work out the eyes, because that’s the hardest part, trying to be glazed
behind the eyes, and moving them and having them drift naturally. I practiced
doing nothing quite a bit, which is harder than you’d think. When they call
“Action,” and you’re like, “Don’t move…” [laughs], it’s a bit difficult.
I’ve read interviews with actors
like James Caan from MISERY, who had to be stuck in bed for long periods of
time on that movie, and it drove him crazy. Did you ever experience that?
Yeah, I know what you mean! We
did this one scene where Stephen’s in the bed, and they attach wires to him and
give him small shocks to kind of activate his muscles, and every time they set
that up, once they were attached, it was like, “OK, now you can’t move,” and I
thought, “I just want to walk, I want to get up!”
Did you get up from the
chair or bed in between takes, or did you stay “in character” in them when the
cameras weren’t rolling?
To begin with, I did; I was
like, “OK, on my first movie, I’m going to be really into this, I’m not going
to get out of my chair the whole day.” That didn’t last very long!
How was it working with
Naomi Watts?
Amazing. She has obviously
done so much great work, and for me, being in my first big movie, I came on
kind of nervous, especially to work with someone like Naomi. But she’s so
grounded in her nature, very down-to-earth, very supportive; we would do takes
together, and she would give just as much on the other side. She made it a very
comfortable environment, so for me it was a pleasure. I was able to learn from
her, because I’ve never been trained in acting, and the quality of people I’ve
managed to work with over the last two years has been fantastic. You watch and
learn and react to what they’re doing, because they do it so well!
‘SHUT IN’ is
released and distributed by CAPTIVE
CINEMA.
SHOWING FEBRUARY 22. NATIONWIDE!
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