A
minute with: Rachel Weisz recounts riding accident
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[June 09, 2017]
LONDON (Reuters) - British actress Rachel Weisz spoke
with Reuters this week, discussing the politics of her
new film, and recounting a dangerous, on-set incident
involving a horse.
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The 47-year-old, who found fame with her role in action,
comedy "The Mummy" in 1999, stars in "My Cousin Rachel", in
which she plays a mysterious woman who is suspected of murdering
her cousin's guardian.
Here are excerpts of the interview:
Q: How would you describe "My Cousin Rachel"?
A: It's a romantic, Gothic, dark, suspenseful, mysterious
thriller. That's a lot of adjectives, but I think it can handle
that description. I stand by that.
Q: Did you have any challenging moments while filming?
A: The horse I rode, I had to learn to ride side-saddle, which
was a first, which is challenging in a corset and a big dress,
he had been trained on "Game of Thrones" to die when you pulled
his left rein very sharply which I didn't know.
So I cantered out of shot and stopped and pulled the left rein,
and he very gracefully buckled his front legs and his back legs
and died on his left side, which was the side I was on... It was
a terrifying moment because I didn't know if I'd get crushed but
I was fine.
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Q: For a period film, "My Cousin Rachel" has modern sensibilities.
A: The novel was written in the 1950s so it had quite twentieth
century ideas, so you know women already had the vote, but (a) woman
who believes in sexual freedom, financial freedom, doesn't think she
should be a possession of her husband in the 1850s is really
radical, so that's what makes the film have a kind of modern edge.
"My Cousin Rachel" is released in UK cinemas on June 9.
(Reporting by Lisa Keddie; Writing by Mark Hanrahan in; London;
Editing by Toby Davis)
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