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She says she was impressed by how he translates pages of the script into each scene. It wasn't until the scenes were shot that she had any idea how they would turn out. "It was in his head. Even the screenwriters, I was just with them the last couple of days, even they admitted that, you know, they wrote it, but still it was realized in a completely different way than they saw in their own heads. And they were talking to each other," the actress said. The film also stars Aaron Eckhart as the president and Gerard Butler as a disgraced secret service agent trapped inside the White House during the brutal attack. Fuqua takes a no-holds barred approach in its depiction of a terror attack on the nation's capital. Tourists are shot with machine guns, bombs go off at will, and the Washington monument is toppled. While graphically violent for most of the R-rated film's two hours, Bassett doesn't feel the film was gratuitous in its approach. "It's about an attack, so no," Bassett said before revealing: "I even took my 78-year old mother in-law and she loved it."
[Associated
Press;
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