Naomi Watts sees nightmares become reality in Shut In.
In the psychological
thriller SHUT IN, Naomi Watts plays a child psychologist who is still grieving
the car accident that killed her husband and paralyzed her step-son (Stranger
Things' Charlie Heaton). Living with the latter in an isolated New England
house, Watts' character begins to experience unsettling phenomena that may or
may not have something to do with a former patient (ROOM's Jacob Tremblay) who
has gone missing. Watts is no stranger to the thriller genre, having appeared
in films like The Ring, Mulholland Drive, King Kong and many others.
“I’ve been a huge fan
of Naomi Watts for a long, long time. Ever since Mulholland Drive, really,”
says director Blackburn of the actress’s breakthrough role as a tormented
ingénue in David Lynch’s acclaimed drama. “When I read the script, she popped
into my head straightaway. She has the ability to switch from calm, normal and
curious to fearful then to terrify in just seconds. I am a great fan and
follower of her work.”
Indeed, Watts has made an
impressive career playing women under siege in such diverse films as Alejandro Iñárritu’s 21 Grams, Michael Haneke’s Funny Games and Gore Verbinksi’s horror hit The Ring. “I’ve always enjoyed the thriller genre,” Watts
explains. “So many different emotions
come with fear, and I like playing fear.”
The British actress, whose
career began in Australia before moving to the U.S., says she was attracted to
the challenges of capturing Mary’s fragmented state of mind. “She is completely consumed with taking care
of one person, and not really relating to anybody in the outside world,” says
Watts. “I think she’s shut down, emotionally. And as much as she wants to care
for her child, it’s difficult for her. She struggles with it, and that’s when
you see her starting to have these nightmares and weird things playing out in
in her mind. The resentment of how her life has changed creeps in.”
Also appealing to the
acclaimed actress was the simplicity of a story centered almost entirely on two
characters and the dramatic change in Mary’s emotional state before and after
the crash that leaves her husband dead and her stepson catatonic.
“When we meet her in the beginning of the film she seems to
be happy,” Watts observes. “Then, we see her in a whole different way a few
months later — she’s lost her husband in this horrific car accident, and her
stepson is now in a vegetative state, in a wheelchair, and completely dependent
upon her. Her whole life becomes about catering to his needs.”
Blackburn secured the highly sought-after actress’s
commitment to the role via video-conference call, a technology that
coincidentally plays a key role in the plot of Shut In.
“I had a nice conversation with him via Skype,” recalls the
actress. “Then I looked at some of his work and thought, wow, he’s accomplished
and very visual; he knows how to handle this genre very well. So I thought
great, okay, I’ll give it a go.”
Blackburn remembers the call a bit differently. “I was
sitting in my flat trying to prepare for this call with Naomi Watts, which was
bizarre in itself,” he says. “We all assumed that following the Skype there
would be a period of silence, then possibly a decline — but she shocked us all
by committing to the project there and then. In that short meeting, she was
everything I’d hoped she would be.”
‘SHUT IN’ is
released and distributed by CAPTIVE
CINEMA.
SHOWING FEBRUARY 22. NATIONWIDE!
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